UPSC Prelims: Complete Strategy

Only about 2 to 3 percent of aspirants who appear for UPSC Prelims actually clear it. Not because the exam is impossibly hard, but because most people prepare without a real plan

Only about 2 to 3 percent of aspirants who appear for UPSC Prelims actually clear it. Not because the exam is impossibly hard, but because most people prepare without a real plan

Most UPSC toppers were not born great writers. They started exactly where you are: writing vague, lengthy answers that scored poorly. What separated them was not talent.

UPSC has never published a detailed marking scheme for its Mains examination. No rubric. No official breakdown of how marks are awarded line by line.

You have written 200 answers. Your notes are color-coded. Your syllabus is covered. But you have no idea if you will clear Mains.

That is not a motivational line. It is a consistent pattern across topper interviews spanning the last decade. Rank holders repeatedly say the same thing: "I read fewer books, but I read them more times."

Most aspirants who fail Prelims do not fail because they did not study enough. They fail because they revised the wrong things, in the wrong order, at the wrong time

Anudeep Durishetty secured UPSC AIR 1 in 2017 on his 5th attempt. Explore his strategy, Anthropology optional, free notes, marksheet, and key lessons for aspirants.

500 marks. That is what the optional subject is worth in UPSC Mains. Out of a total of 1750 marks in the written examination, optional papers carry

A stopwatch can tell a sprinter exactly how fast she ran. It is precise, instant, and completely objective. But it cannot tell her why

Picture this. An aspirant writes a Mains answer on the causes of agrarian distress in India. She pastes it into ChatGPT. The response comes back in seconds: