Launched this week
DSA Quest

DSA Quest

Learn DSA Like a Game

7 followers

DSA Quest is an interactive learning experience designed to help you master data structures and algorithms through visualizations, challenges, and hands-on exploration. Whether you are preparing for coding interviews, strengthening your computer science fundamentals, or simply curious about how algorithms really work, DSA Quest turns complex ideas into an engaging journey, one step at a time. Learn by doing. Visualize to understand. Level up your problem-solving skills.
DSA Quest gallery image
DSA Quest gallery image
DSA Quest gallery image
DSA Quest gallery image
DSA Quest gallery image
Free Options
Launch tags:ProductivityEducationSaaS
Launch Team / Built With
ace.me
ace.me
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Promoted

What do you think? …

Itteba Gilani
Maker
📌
Hello everyone! My name is Itteba and I created DSA Quest to help people like me, who can't solve Leetcode to save their lives. I am currently in search of a summer software engineering internship, and that includes not just mass applying but also grinding Neetcode's videos. As I went through problem after problem, I realized that my biggest issue was not effort, but understanding. I could follow solutions when someone explained them, but when it came time to solve a problem on my own, everything felt abstract and overwhelming. Arrays, pointers, recursion, and trees all blurred together without a clear mental model. I created DSA Quest because I wanted a way to actually see what was happening. I wanted to visualize how data structures change over time and how algorithms move step by step, instead of trying to imagine everything in my head. What started as a personal learning tool slowly turned into something I felt others could benefit from too. DSA Quest is built for people who feel stuck, frustrated, or behind when it comes to DSA. It is meant to make learning feel less intimidating and more intuitive by turning concepts into something you can explore, interact with, and understand at your own pace.
Yash Salvi

I like the game-like approach to something that usually feels intimidating. What surprised you most about how learners engaged with it early on?