"Aha!" Maxim whispered. The "free" part of the GDZ wasn't just about the money; it was about the freedom from the mental block that had paralyzed him for two hours.

He clicked a link to a well-known educational portal. Usually, he avoided "GDZ" (solved homework) because he wanted to actually learn, but tonight was an emergency. As the page loaded, he didn't just look for the answer. He looked for the path .

to the other side, how they used a clever substitution he hadn't considered. It wasn't "cheating" in that moment; it was like a master showing a student how to hold the bow of a violin.

Maxim was a good student, but Nikolskii’s problems were legendary for their complexity. Tomorrow was the big mid-term test, and he was stuck on a particularly brutal system of equations. His notes were a mess of crossed-out variables and ink blots.

The solution popped up—handwritten, scanned, and perfectly clear. He watched how the author moved the

He closed the browser, pulled a fresh sheet of paper, and solved the next three problems on his own using that same technique. When he finally hit the pillow, the Nikolskii textbook didn't look like a monster anymore—just a puzzle that he now had the tools to solve.

He typed the phrase that every desperate student knows by heart: (free solved exercises for 10th grade algebra, Nikolskii).