"Come on," he whispered. "Buffer. Just buffer."

Example: Quiz asks, “What was the name of the ship?” Search for “ship” in the book. The first result will likely be the answer. This isn’t cheating—it’s smart use of the platform’s design.

Instead, invest that same 20 minutes you would have spent hunting cheats into actual reading. Use the highlighter. Use Ctrl+F. Read at your real level. You’ll spend less time, feel less stressed, and—most importantly—actually remember the story. And in the end, isn’t that why you’re learning English in the first place?

But as he scanned the extracted text, he noticed something odd.

The search for is a dead end—technically, ethically, and educationally. The platform is designed to randomize questions, track reading time, and flag anomalies. Even if you find answers today, next week’s quiz will be different.

Here are some sample Xreading quiz answers to give you an idea:

It wasn't a list of answers like "A, B, A, C." Instead, it was a pattern.