WILD×AI: College Edition · for students

Everyone walks in with the same AI.
Almost no one learns to run it.

You're about to spend four years, and a lot of money, holding the most powerful tool ever made. Most people on your floor will use it to get answers and get caught less, and call that a skill. You can be the one who actually drives it - with a system you built that knows you, that no one else has.

The Part Nobody Says Out Loud

If AI makes you a little uneasy, good.

That instinct is correct, and most of the people selling it to you do not share it. So here is the thing almost no one will tell you straight.

Ask one of these systems a question with no context and it does not leave the answer blank. It hands you the most average, most likely response and lets you believe it was yours. Lean on that long enough and your taste, your writing, the way you think get quietly sanded down to match everyone else who leaned on the same machine. Fluent, competent, and impossible to tell apart from anyone else.

That is the real risk. Not getting caught. Disappearing into the average.

The way out is not to avoid AI. You can't, and pretending you will is its own kind of losing. The way out is to know yourself well enough, and drive the thing well enough, that it amplifies you instead of editing you. That is a skill. It is learnable. And the summer before college is the cheapest time there will ever be to learn it.

Don't Take Our Word For It

Build something only you could make. Twenty minutes, free.

No card, no signup, no catch. We'll walk you through the one move almost nobody makes: giving an AI real context about who you actually are. Then you'll watch the same question go from generic nothing to something that sounds like you.

It's the smallest version of what the program builds, it takes about twenty minutes, and it's yours to keep and show people. If it doesn't change how you think about this, you've lost nothing.

Get the 20-minute build →

If You Do The Whole Thing

What you walk away with

Something real, shipped

A project you prototype, shape into something people can actually use, and put into the world under your own name before fall semester. You leave having made a thing and been seen for it, instead of waiting four years for someone's permission.

AI capability most adults don't have

You learn to build and direct your own agents, work across whatever model is best that month, and run AI like a director instead of a question-asker. The wiser half too: knowing when to refuse it.

A system that's yours

A personal navigator you build and own, configured to your values and your voice, that knows your classes and your projects. Not a chat that forgets you every morning. It stays with you, and everything in it is yours to keep.

A Compass

A written, defended sense of who you are: what you value, what you're good at, what you're aiming at. Built from your own reflection, never handed to you. The thing you reread when the dorm gets loud at 3 AM and you've forgotten which way is up.

He didn't speak until he was five. He got kicked out of college after three semesters, then came back and graduated with honors. He scored in the 50th percentile on his first LSAT and the 96th on his second. He failed the bar exam, then came back and crushed it. He has walked through every gate you're about to walk through, which is rarer than it should be in someone teaching this.

And he isn't an AI guy who discovered students. He spent fifteen years as a college professor, tenured and award-winning, and gave up the tenured chair to do this, because the institutions can't move at the speed this moment is moving. He works at the front edge of AI every day, and he'll be learning alongside you, not lecturing at you.

Why The Summer Before

Right now, before you leave, your habits with this stuff are still yours to choose. The cues that lock them in - the dorm, the deadlines, the 1 AM panic - haven't started yet.

After about October of freshman year, whatever pattern you fell into hardens and mostly runs itself for four years. Nobody decides to outsource their own thinking. It just happens, one tired night at a time, until it's who you are. The summer before is the one cheap moment to decide who you're going to be with this. It does not come back.

If You Want In

This is yours to choose. Then theirs to back.

The program only works if you actually want it. That's not a marketing line, it's how it's built, and it's why this isn't a decision your parents get to make for you. It's yours to make, and then theirs to back. If you want in, the move is to show them. Here's a message you can send. Copy it, change it, make it sound like you.

Hey - I looked into this and I actually want to do it.

It's a six-week summer program before college (wildnavigation.com/college). It is not an AI-cheating thing, it's the opposite: you build a real project and ship it, you figure out who you are before you leave, and you learn to actually run AI instead of getting run by it. The guy who runs it was a college professor for fifteen years.

Can we talk about it? Enrollment closes June 29.

And if the answer is no, that's genuinely fine. Nobody is going to chase you. This is for people who want it.

Three things you can do right now.

1

Build the free one

Twenty minutes, no catch. Feel the difference for yourself before you decide anything.

Start the build
2

Take the Student Reading

Ten minutes, no grade, no right answers. An honest read on where you actually stand with AI. Your answers stay yours.

Take the Reading
3

Show your parents

If you want in, send them the message above and start the conversation. Enrollment closes June 29.

Get the message