How the fretboard is organized
Continue step 1 of 8: Learn how strings, frets, and standard tuning combine into a repeatable note map.
Pocket.Practice
Explore standard tuning, find notes, and map chord or scale tones across the first twelve frets.
Practice Hub
Start from a preset, review weak spots, or jump back into the active fretboard.
Open lesson libraryContinue step 1 of 8: Learn how strings, frets, and standard tuning combine into a repeatable note map.
Use this path for a quick playable test: start the first lesson, finish one note drill, then try chord tones and scale degrees.
These drills form the first public learning loop: notes, chord tones, and scale degrees.
Train the fretboard map with string-specific questions.
Build triad fluency with concept-first chord-tone questions.
Connect major and minor scale degrees to real fretboard locations.
Keep using these recovered drills as stretch work and review while the MVP stays focused.
Train major/minor 3rds, 5ths, and other intervals by string.
Use highlighted anchors to connect CAGED octave positions.
Practice which chord tone sits in the bass of each inversion.
After the guided lesson, start quick warmup to reinforce it with 10 questions at 80%+.
Daily Quest
After the guided lesson, start quick warmup to reinforce it with 10 questions at 80%+.
Finish a drill to start building your recent practice history.
No weak spots yet. Complete a few sessions and this will get more useful.
Interactive Map
Swipe the fretboard sideways, then tap the highlighted string.
Finish a session to save your first local result.