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Updated Mar 22, 2026
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Fungi are everywhere around you - from the mushrooms on... Show more








Think of fungi as nature's recyclers with a twist - they're eukaryotic organisms that can't make their own food like plants do. Instead, they're heterotrophic, meaning they need to get their nutrients from other sources.
Here's what sets them apart: their cell walls are made of chitin (the same stuff in insect shells), not cellulose like plants. Most fungi are built from microscopic threads called hyphae, which weave together to form a network called a mycelium - basically the main body of the fungus that's often hidden underground.
The key terms you need to know include saprophytes (decomposers that feed on dead stuff), parasites (fungi that harm their hosts), and extracellular digestion (they secrete enzymes outside their body to break down food before absorbing it).
Remember: Fungi store food as glycogen, just like animals do, not starch like plants!

Fungi come in two main structural types. Aseptate hyphae (like in Rhizopus) are basically long tubes with many nuclei floating around - no dividing walls. Septate hyphae have cross-walls with pores that let stuff move between compartments.
Saprophytic nutrition is how most fungi survive - they're the ultimate decomposers. The mycelium spreads over dead organic matter, secretes digestive enzymes, breaks everything down into simple molecules, then absorbs the nutrients. This process is crucial for recycling nutrients in ecosystems.
Some fungi are parasites that harm living hosts (think athlete's foot), whilst others form beneficial partnerships. Lichens are fungi teamed up with algae, and mycorrhizae are fungi living with plant roots - both organisms benefit from these relationships.
Key Point: Yeast is the odd one out - it's unicellular and doesn't form a mycelium at all!

Fungi are pretty clever when it comes to reproduction - they've got options! Asexual reproduction is the quick and easy method when conditions are good. Most fungi produce loads of lightweight spores in structures called sporangia, which get dispersed by wind or water.
Yeast does things differently - it reproduces by budding. A small bud forms on the parent cell, gets a copy of the nucleus through mitosis, grows, and eventually breaks off to live independently.
Sexual reproduction kicks in when times get tough. Two different mating strains come together, their nuclei fuse to create a zygospore with a tough outer wall that can survive harsh conditions. When things improve, the zygospore undergoes meiosis to produce new spores with genetic variation.
Exam Tip: Remember that sexual reproduction in fungi introduces genetic variation and helps them survive adverse conditions!

Rhizopus is that black fuzzy mould you've probably seen on old bread. Its structure is perfectly designed for its lifestyle. Stolons grow horizontally across the surface, rhizoids anchor it down and absorb nutrients like roots, and sporangiophores stand upright supporting the black sporangium full of spores.
The life cycle is straightforward. In good conditions, the sporangium bursts and releases thousands of spores. If one lands on suitable food (like your sandwich), it germinates into a new mycelium.
When conditions get rough, sexual reproduction begins. Hyphae from different mating strains grow toward each other, form swellings called gametangia, and their nuclei fuse to create a diploid zygospore.
This zygospore can survive drought and other nasties. When conditions improve, it germinates through meiosis, producing a new sporangiophore and releasing fresh haploid spores.
Visual Memory: Picture Rhizopus like a tiny forest - roots below (rhizoids), stems above (sporangiophores), and seed pods on top (sporangia)!

Yeast (Saccharomyces) breaks all the fungal rules by being unicellular and oval-shaped. It's got the typical fungal features - chitin cell wall, nucleus, cytoplasm - but it's all packed into one cell with a large vacuole.
Budding is yeast's reproduction method. A small bud forms, the nucleus divides by mitosis, one daughter nucleus moves into the bud, and eventually it separates (or stays attached to form a colony).
Here's where yeast gets really interesting - it's a facultative anaerobe. With oxygen, it does normal aerobic respiration. Without oxygen, it switches to fermentation, breaking glucose down into ethanol and carbon dioxide.
This fermentation process is why yeast is so economically important. The CO₂ makes bread rise, and the ethanol is essential for brewing alcoholic drinks.
Quick Formula: Glucose → Ethanol + Carbon Dioxide + Energy (that's fermentation in a nutshell!)

Fungi have a massive impact on human life, and you need to know both sides for your exams. On the beneficial side, edible mushrooms provide food, yeast is essential for baking and brewing, certain moulds ripen cheeses, and Penicillium produces penicillin - the antibiotic that revolutionised medicine.
The harmful side includes food spoilage (like Rhizopus on bread), devastating plant diseases (potato blight caused the Irish Famine), human infections (athlete's foot, ringworm, thrush), and material damage (dry rot destroying timber, mildew damaging fabrics).
As decomposers, saprophytic fungi are absolutely vital for breaking down dead organic matter and recycling nutrients back into ecosystems. Without them, we'd be drowning in dead leaves and fallen trees!
The comparison between Rhizopus and yeast highlights key differences: multicellular vs unicellular, spore production vs budding, and complex mycelial structure vs simple single cells.
Exam Strategy: Always give specific examples - "potato blight caused the Irish Famine" scores more marks than just "plant diseases"!

For your exams, remember the core concepts: fungi are eukaryotic heterotrophs with chitin cell walls, most form mycelia of hyphae (except unicellular yeast), and they get nutrition through saprophytic, parasitic, or symbiotic relationships.
Rhizopus structure includes stolons, rhizoids, and sporangiophores. Its life cycle involves asexual spore production in good conditions and sexual zygospore formation when stressed.
Yeast reproduces by budding and is a facultative anaerobe - crucial for fermentation in baking and brewing industries.
For economic importance, always give two beneficial examples (like penicillin production and yeast in food) and two harmful ones (like potato blight and athlete's foot) with specific details.
Final Tip: Practice drawing the Rhizopus structure and yeast budding - diagrams are worth serious marks in biology exams!
Our AI companion is specifically built for the needs of students. Based on the millions of content pieces we have on the platform we can provide truly meaningful and relevant answers to students. But its not only about answers, the companion is even more about guiding students through their daily learning challenges, with personalised study plans, quizzes or content pieces in the chat and 100% personalisation based on the students skills and developments.
You can download the app in the Google Play Store and in the Apple App Store.
That's right! Enjoy free access to study content, connect with fellow students, and get instant help – all at your fingertips.
App Store
Google Play
The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.
Stefan S
iOS user
This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.
Samantha Klich
Android user
Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.
Anna
iOS user
I think it’s very much worth it and you’ll end up using it a lot once you get the hang of it and even after looking at others notes you can still ask your Artificial intelligence buddy the question and ask to simplify it if you still don’t get it!!! In the end I think it’s worth it 😊👍 ⚠️Also DID I MENTION ITS FREEE YOU DON’T HAVE TO PAY FOR ANYTHING AND STILL GET YOUR GRADES IN PERFECTLY❗️❗️⚠️
Thomas R
iOS user
Knowunity is the BEST app I’ve used in a minute. This is not an ai review or anything this is genuinely coming from a 7th grade student (I know 2011 im young) but dude this app is a 10/10 i have maintained a 3.8 gpa and have plenty of time for gaming. I love it and my mom is just happy I got good grades
Brad T
Android user
Not only did it help me find the answer but it also showed me alternative ways to solve it. I was horrible in math and science but now I have an a in both subjects. Thanks for the help🤍🤍
David K
iOS user
The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!
Sudenaz Ocak
Android user
In school I was really bad at maths but thanks to the app, I am doing better now. I am so grateful that you made the app.
Greenlight Bonnie
Android user
I found this app a couple years ago and it has only gotten better since then. I really love it because it can help with written questions and photo questions. Also, it can find study guides that other people have made as well as flashcard sets and practice tests. The free version is also amazing for students who might not be able to afford it. Would 100% recommend
Aubrey
iOS user
Best app if you're in Highschool or Junior high. I have been using this app for 2 school years and it's the best, it's good if you don't have anyone to help you with school work.😋🩷🎀
Marco B
iOS user
THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE Knowunity AI. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮
Elisha
iOS user
This app is phenomenal down to the correct info and the various topics you can study! I greatly recommend it for people who struggle with procrastination and those who need homework help. It has been perfectly accurate for world 1 history as far as I’ve seen! Geometry too!
Paul T
iOS user
The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.
Stefan S
iOS user
This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.
Samantha Klich
Android user
Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.
Anna
iOS user
I think it’s very much worth it and you’ll end up using it a lot once you get the hang of it and even after looking at others notes you can still ask your Artificial intelligence buddy the question and ask to simplify it if you still don’t get it!!! In the end I think it’s worth it 😊👍 ⚠️Also DID I MENTION ITS FREEE YOU DON’T HAVE TO PAY FOR ANYTHING AND STILL GET YOUR GRADES IN PERFECTLY❗️❗️⚠️
Thomas R
iOS user
Knowunity is the BEST app I’ve used in a minute. This is not an ai review or anything this is genuinely coming from a 7th grade student (I know 2011 im young) but dude this app is a 10/10 i have maintained a 3.8 gpa and have plenty of time for gaming. I love it and my mom is just happy I got good grades
Brad T
Android user
Not only did it help me find the answer but it also showed me alternative ways to solve it. I was horrible in math and science but now I have an a in both subjects. Thanks for the help🤍🤍
David K
iOS user
The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!
Sudenaz Ocak
Android user
In school I was really bad at maths but thanks to the app, I am doing better now. I am so grateful that you made the app.
Greenlight Bonnie
Android user
I found this app a couple years ago and it has only gotten better since then. I really love it because it can help with written questions and photo questions. Also, it can find study guides that other people have made as well as flashcard sets and practice tests. The free version is also amazing for students who might not be able to afford it. Would 100% recommend
Aubrey
iOS user
Best app if you're in Highschool or Junior high. I have been using this app for 2 school years and it's the best, it's good if you don't have anyone to help you with school work.😋🩷🎀
Marco B
iOS user
THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE Knowunity AI. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮
Elisha
iOS user
This app is phenomenal down to the correct info and the various topics you can study! I greatly recommend it for people who struggle with procrastination and those who need homework help. It has been perfectly accurate for world 1 history as far as I’ve seen! Geometry too!
Paul T
iOS user
Fungi are everywhere around you - from the mushrooms on your pizza to the yeast that makes bread rise, and even the mould that grows on forgotten leftovers! They're neither plants nor animals but form their own unique kingdom with... Show more

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Join milions of students
Think of fungi as nature's recyclers with a twist - they're eukaryotic organisms that can't make their own food like plants do. Instead, they're heterotrophic, meaning they need to get their nutrients from other sources.
Here's what sets them apart: their cell walls are made of chitin (the same stuff in insect shells), not cellulose like plants. Most fungi are built from microscopic threads called hyphae, which weave together to form a network called a mycelium - basically the main body of the fungus that's often hidden underground.
The key terms you need to know include saprophytes (decomposers that feed on dead stuff), parasites (fungi that harm their hosts), and extracellular digestion (they secrete enzymes outside their body to break down food before absorbing it).
Remember: Fungi store food as glycogen, just like animals do, not starch like plants!

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Fungi come in two main structural types. Aseptate hyphae (like in Rhizopus) are basically long tubes with many nuclei floating around - no dividing walls. Septate hyphae have cross-walls with pores that let stuff move between compartments.
Saprophytic nutrition is how most fungi survive - they're the ultimate decomposers. The mycelium spreads over dead organic matter, secretes digestive enzymes, breaks everything down into simple molecules, then absorbs the nutrients. This process is crucial for recycling nutrients in ecosystems.
Some fungi are parasites that harm living hosts (think athlete's foot), whilst others form beneficial partnerships. Lichens are fungi teamed up with algae, and mycorrhizae are fungi living with plant roots - both organisms benefit from these relationships.
Key Point: Yeast is the odd one out - it's unicellular and doesn't form a mycelium at all!

Access to all documents
Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Fungi are pretty clever when it comes to reproduction - they've got options! Asexual reproduction is the quick and easy method when conditions are good. Most fungi produce loads of lightweight spores in structures called sporangia, which get dispersed by wind or water.
Yeast does things differently - it reproduces by budding. A small bud forms on the parent cell, gets a copy of the nucleus through mitosis, grows, and eventually breaks off to live independently.
Sexual reproduction kicks in when times get tough. Two different mating strains come together, their nuclei fuse to create a zygospore with a tough outer wall that can survive harsh conditions. When things improve, the zygospore undergoes meiosis to produce new spores with genetic variation.
Exam Tip: Remember that sexual reproduction in fungi introduces genetic variation and helps them survive adverse conditions!

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Rhizopus is that black fuzzy mould you've probably seen on old bread. Its structure is perfectly designed for its lifestyle. Stolons grow horizontally across the surface, rhizoids anchor it down and absorb nutrients like roots, and sporangiophores stand upright supporting the black sporangium full of spores.
The life cycle is straightforward. In good conditions, the sporangium bursts and releases thousands of spores. If one lands on suitable food (like your sandwich), it germinates into a new mycelium.
When conditions get rough, sexual reproduction begins. Hyphae from different mating strains grow toward each other, form swellings called gametangia, and their nuclei fuse to create a diploid zygospore.
This zygospore can survive drought and other nasties. When conditions improve, it germinates through meiosis, producing a new sporangiophore and releasing fresh haploid spores.
Visual Memory: Picture Rhizopus like a tiny forest - roots below (rhizoids), stems above (sporangiophores), and seed pods on top (sporangia)!

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Yeast (Saccharomyces) breaks all the fungal rules by being unicellular and oval-shaped. It's got the typical fungal features - chitin cell wall, nucleus, cytoplasm - but it's all packed into one cell with a large vacuole.
Budding is yeast's reproduction method. A small bud forms, the nucleus divides by mitosis, one daughter nucleus moves into the bud, and eventually it separates (or stays attached to form a colony).
Here's where yeast gets really interesting - it's a facultative anaerobe. With oxygen, it does normal aerobic respiration. Without oxygen, it switches to fermentation, breaking glucose down into ethanol and carbon dioxide.
This fermentation process is why yeast is so economically important. The CO₂ makes bread rise, and the ethanol is essential for brewing alcoholic drinks.
Quick Formula: Glucose → Ethanol + Carbon Dioxide + Energy (that's fermentation in a nutshell!)

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Fungi have a massive impact on human life, and you need to know both sides for your exams. On the beneficial side, edible mushrooms provide food, yeast is essential for baking and brewing, certain moulds ripen cheeses, and Penicillium produces penicillin - the antibiotic that revolutionised medicine.
The harmful side includes food spoilage (like Rhizopus on bread), devastating plant diseases (potato blight caused the Irish Famine), human infections (athlete's foot, ringworm, thrush), and material damage (dry rot destroying timber, mildew damaging fabrics).
As decomposers, saprophytic fungi are absolutely vital for breaking down dead organic matter and recycling nutrients back into ecosystems. Without them, we'd be drowning in dead leaves and fallen trees!
The comparison between Rhizopus and yeast highlights key differences: multicellular vs unicellular, spore production vs budding, and complex mycelial structure vs simple single cells.
Exam Strategy: Always give specific examples - "potato blight caused the Irish Famine" scores more marks than just "plant diseases"!

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
For your exams, remember the core concepts: fungi are eukaryotic heterotrophs with chitin cell walls, most form mycelia of hyphae (except unicellular yeast), and they get nutrition through saprophytic, parasitic, or symbiotic relationships.
Rhizopus structure includes stolons, rhizoids, and sporangiophores. Its life cycle involves asexual spore production in good conditions and sexual zygospore formation when stressed.
Yeast reproduces by budding and is a facultative anaerobe - crucial for fermentation in baking and brewing industries.
For economic importance, always give two beneficial examples (like penicillin production and yeast in food) and two harmful ones (like potato blight and athlete's foot) with specific details.
Final Tip: Practice drawing the Rhizopus structure and yeast budding - diagrams are worth serious marks in biology exams!
Our AI companion is specifically built for the needs of students. Based on the millions of content pieces we have on the platform we can provide truly meaningful and relevant answers to students. But its not only about answers, the companion is even more about guiding students through their daily learning challenges, with personalised study plans, quizzes or content pieces in the chat and 100% personalisation based on the students skills and developments.
You can download the app in the Google Play Store and in the Apple App Store.
That's right! Enjoy free access to study content, connect with fellow students, and get instant help – all at your fingertips.
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The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.
Stefan S
iOS user
This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.
Samantha Klich
Android user
Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.
Anna
iOS user
I think it’s very much worth it and you’ll end up using it a lot once you get the hang of it and even after looking at others notes you can still ask your Artificial intelligence buddy the question and ask to simplify it if you still don’t get it!!! In the end I think it’s worth it 😊👍 ⚠️Also DID I MENTION ITS FREEE YOU DON’T HAVE TO PAY FOR ANYTHING AND STILL GET YOUR GRADES IN PERFECTLY❗️❗️⚠️
Thomas R
iOS user
Knowunity is the BEST app I’ve used in a minute. This is not an ai review or anything this is genuinely coming from a 7th grade student (I know 2011 im young) but dude this app is a 10/10 i have maintained a 3.8 gpa and have plenty of time for gaming. I love it and my mom is just happy I got good grades
Brad T
Android user
Not only did it help me find the answer but it also showed me alternative ways to solve it. I was horrible in math and science but now I have an a in both subjects. Thanks for the help🤍🤍
David K
iOS user
The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!
Sudenaz Ocak
Android user
In school I was really bad at maths but thanks to the app, I am doing better now. I am so grateful that you made the app.
Greenlight Bonnie
Android user
I found this app a couple years ago and it has only gotten better since then. I really love it because it can help with written questions and photo questions. Also, it can find study guides that other people have made as well as flashcard sets and practice tests. The free version is also amazing for students who might not be able to afford it. Would 100% recommend
Aubrey
iOS user
Best app if you're in Highschool or Junior high. I have been using this app for 2 school years and it's the best, it's good if you don't have anyone to help you with school work.😋🩷🎀
Marco B
iOS user
THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE Knowunity AI. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮
Elisha
iOS user
This app is phenomenal down to the correct info and the various topics you can study! I greatly recommend it for people who struggle with procrastination and those who need homework help. It has been perfectly accurate for world 1 history as far as I’ve seen! Geometry too!
Paul T
iOS user
The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.
Stefan S
iOS user
This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.
Samantha Klich
Android user
Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.
Anna
iOS user
I think it’s very much worth it and you’ll end up using it a lot once you get the hang of it and even after looking at others notes you can still ask your Artificial intelligence buddy the question and ask to simplify it if you still don’t get it!!! In the end I think it’s worth it 😊👍 ⚠️Also DID I MENTION ITS FREEE YOU DON’T HAVE TO PAY FOR ANYTHING AND STILL GET YOUR GRADES IN PERFECTLY❗️❗️⚠️
Thomas R
iOS user
Knowunity is the BEST app I’ve used in a minute. This is not an ai review or anything this is genuinely coming from a 7th grade student (I know 2011 im young) but dude this app is a 10/10 i have maintained a 3.8 gpa and have plenty of time for gaming. I love it and my mom is just happy I got good grades
Brad T
Android user
Not only did it help me find the answer but it also showed me alternative ways to solve it. I was horrible in math and science but now I have an a in both subjects. Thanks for the help🤍🤍
David K
iOS user
The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!
Sudenaz Ocak
Android user
In school I was really bad at maths but thanks to the app, I am doing better now. I am so grateful that you made the app.
Greenlight Bonnie
Android user
I found this app a couple years ago and it has only gotten better since then. I really love it because it can help with written questions and photo questions. Also, it can find study guides that other people have made as well as flashcard sets and practice tests. The free version is also amazing for students who might not be able to afford it. Would 100% recommend
Aubrey
iOS user
Best app if you're in Highschool or Junior high. I have been using this app for 2 school years and it's the best, it's good if you don't have anyone to help you with school work.😋🩷🎀
Marco B
iOS user
THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE Knowunity AI. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮
Elisha
iOS user
This app is phenomenal down to the correct info and the various topics you can study! I greatly recommend it for people who struggle with procrastination and those who need homework help. It has been perfectly accurate for world 1 history as far as I’ve seen! Geometry too!
Paul T
iOS user