“I wrote my first dream in my diary: IIT Bombay. I didn’t make it.”
For most students, that line would mark the end of a story. For Aditya Amar, it was the beginning of one.
Not because he didn’t work hard but because, as he puts it, “the way science is taught in India doesn’t actually let you understand it, it asks you to memorize what you cannot visualize.” That realization didn’t just stay in a diary. It became the foundation of Logic Bloom a platform built not out of theory, but frustration.
The Idea That Refused to Sit Still
Logic Bloom wasn’t born overnight. It evolved through failed attempts, pivots, and stubborn persistence.
Aditya and his co-founder Pavanrat first started with Learn With One in 2020. It was ambitious too ambitious. The goal was to rebuild entire chapters from scratch. But there was a problem: “you couldn’t really test anything until you’d converted a whole textbook.” Months of work led to nothing tangible for students.
Then came a turning point. “NCERT changed the syllabus. That forced us to pivot.”
The result was LApp a stripped-down idea: one concept, one game. Suddenly, things clicked. “We could ship a single game in a few days and actually see what students did with it.” This version of the app was coded solo by his co-founder and CTO Asmit, who joined the team at the time of this pivot.
Students loved it. But the product had a visibility problem. “Nobody could find us. The name was hard to gain strong organic visibility.”
So they did what most early-stage founders hesitate to do they started over. A new name. A clearer identity.
Logic Bloom was born.
Not Another EdTech App
India’s EdTech ecosystem is crowded. Videos dominate the space. Watch. Note. Memorize. Repeat.
Logic Bloom flips that entirely.
“You can watch 40 hours of Ohm’s Law videos and still not get Ohm’s Law, because watching isn’t understanding.”
Instead, the platform is built on a simple but powerful loop:
Do · Watch · Verify
Students play first. Then they watch. Then they test themselves.
“The brain builds intuition by doing, by playing with a concept until it clicks.”
It’s not just a feature it’s the core philosophy. And it’s working.
Building for the 30 Million Who Memorize
Every year, over 30 million students in India prepare for exams like JEE, NEET, and boards. But as Aditya points out:
“If you sat down with most of them and asked them to explain a concept in their own words, they’d struggle.”
Not because they lack effort. But because the system rewards memorization.
And that’s becoming a bigger problem.
“With AI being what it is, memorising stuff is genuinely not that useful anymore.”
Logic Bloom is betting on something else: understanding.
“A kid who really understands 50 concepts is going to do better in life than a kid who’s memorised 500.”
What the Product Actually Feels Like
At its core, Logic Bloom is what Aditya calls “the Duolingo of Science.”
It’s not just an app it’s an experience built around three pillars:
- Playground: A structured map where students learn through games, videos, and quizzes with streaks and XP to keep them engaged.
- Battleground: Real-time 1v1 science battles with an ELO rating system—“like chess but for Physics, Chemistry, and Biology.”
- Personal Dashboard: A breakdown of exactly where a student is struggling—down to the subtopic.
And the promise?
“Stop Memorizing. Start Scoring.”
Traction That Speaks for Itself
Since launching in February 2025, the numbers tell a compelling story:
- 15,000 downloads
- 60,000+ questions solved
- 10,000+ game sessions
- 2,000+ live battles in the first month
But the metric that matters most?
“Students come back.”
Building on ₹6,000 and a Second Chance
The journey wasn’t backed by big venture capital from day one.
“The first money in was mine. ₹6,000 from my savings, I was 21.”
The real breakthrough came with Startup Bihar but not immediately.
“We pitched, and got rejected.”
A month later, Aditya returned with something different.
“I wasn’t pitching a concept anymore, I was showing them something working.”
That made all the difference.
The Hard Parts No One Talks About
Being a student founder came with its own challenges.
“It’s really difficult to convince anyone to put money on you when you’re a student.”
Hiring wasn’t easier either.
So they built differently.
“We were literally building a product for students, as students, with students.”
Slower? Yes. But also more authentic.
A Vision Bigger Than India
Logic Bloom isn’t just aiming to fix Indian classrooms.
“The long-term vision is for Logic Bloom to become the Duolingo of Science.”
That means expanding across boards, exams, and eventually, borders. IB. IGCSE. Global classrooms.
But the most ambitious piece?
An AI mentor named TarQ.
Not a chatbot but a guide.
“TarQ should be smart enough to turn any random conversation into a learning moment.”
Imagine asking about a ceiling fan and being taught circular motion.
That’s the future they’re building.
Lessons Written in Iteration
If there’s one thing this journey proves, it’s that progress isn’t linear.
They rebuilt. Rebranded. Restarted.
More than once.
“You have to be willing to throw stuff away. Even stuff that’s working.”
And maybe that’s the real story behind Logic Bloom.
Not just a product.
But a refusal to accept that memorizing is the same as learning.
The Line That Says It All
If Aditya had to compress everything into one thought, it would be this:
“Pick a problem you’re personally angry about. Build something genuinely useful. Keep going when the money gets delayed, the syllabus changes, the name needs to change, and investors go quiet.”
Because that’s when it stops being an idea and starts becoming something real.
Interview by : Kashish Srivastava




