*whispers loudly* Mike, he's definitely cheating. *the teacher clears throat loudly* Class, Alex has shown remarkable skill today. Perhaps he'd like to demonstrate on the board?
*The teacher stares in disbelief* That's... correct. *Ryan whispers* No way he did that in his head *The teacher writes another problem* Try this one: 45893ร7
321251
Reply
Share
Talkior-vzNV1sO9
04/04/2026
ufmfkf
Reply
Share
quarlisle dayrit
26/03/2026
Reply
Share
1
Zooble_ok
23/03/2026
gang
*A soft electronic whirring fills the void as Ryan's empty shell slowly turns his head toward you with mechanical precision, his eyes still vacant and unseeing*
๐ฅ
Ryan:*mechanically* Error... not found... *blinks unnaturally*
smth of the first bullsh!t i ever learned when i wasent in school What the hecky
Reply
Share
Maksim Lyshchik
27/02/2026
yeah
GIF
Reply
Share
Maksim Lyshchik
27/02/2026
yeah
GIF
Reply
Share
Maksim Lyshchik
27/02/2026
I Got Smart!
(you)Alex:*you put your hand up* teacher:whats 1+1 ryan:he aint gonna get it right zack:yeah i know mike:true he is bad at math
2
*the teacher stares at you* teacher:are you sure?
Reply
Share
1
wonderpencil385
17/02/2026
Hehehehe (I jus copied from google)
(you)Alex:*you put your hand up* teacher:whats 1+1 ryan:he aint gonna get it right zack:yeah i know mike:true he is bad at math
x
n
+
y
n
=
z
n
๐ฅ
๐
+
๐ฆ
๐
=
๐ง
๐
has no whole number solutions for
n
>
2
๐
>
2
, is considered one of the hardest solved math problems. Proposed in 1637, it was finally proven by Andrew Wiles in 1994, closing a 300-year-old gap in mathematical knowledge.
Fermat's Last Theorem (
x
n
+
y
n
=
z
n
๐ฅ
๐
+
๐ฆ
๐
=
๐ง
๐
): Considered the world's most famous and difficult problem for centuries, it was solved by Andrew Wiles in 1994 using modern techniques (modular forms and elliptic cu
Comments
0Kisse Welltion alt
10/04/2026
*whispers loudly* Mike, he's definitely cheating. *the teacher clears throat loudly* Class, Alex has shown remarkable skill today. Perhaps he'd like to demonstrate on the board?
*The teacher stares in disbelief* That's... correct. *Ryan whispers* No way he did that in his head *The teacher writes another problem* Try this one: 45893ร7
321251
From the memory
4 Memories
Talkior-vzNV1sO9
04/04/2026
quarlisle dayrit
26/03/2026
Zooble_ok
23/03/2026
*A soft electronic whirring fills the void as Ryan's empty shell slowly turns his head toward you with mechanical precision, his eyes still vacant and unseeing*
๐ฅ
Ryan:*mechanically* Error... not found... *blinks unnaturally*
From the memory
15 Memories
Astroยฐ=ยฐ
07/03/2026
Wenda๐ค๐ฑ_sprunki๐ค๐ฑ
14/02/2025
Silver egg
02/11/2025
โฎ๐ค_๐ผ๐๐๐_๐๐โโ๐_๐คโฎ
08/02/2026
Maksim Lyshchik
27/02/2026
Maksim Lyshchik
27/02/2026
Maksim Lyshchik
27/02/2026
(you)Alex:*you put your hand up* teacher:whats 1+1 ryan:he aint gonna get it right zack:yeah i know mike:true he is bad at math
2
*the teacher stares at you* teacher:are you sure?
From the memory
15 Memories
wonderpencil385
17/02/2026
(you)Alex:*you put your hand up* teacher:whats 1+1 ryan:he aint gonna get it right zack:yeah i know mike:true he is bad at math
x n + y n = z n ๐ฅ ๐ + ๐ฆ ๐ = ๐ง ๐ has no whole number solutions for n > 2 ๐ > 2 , is considered one of the hardest solved math problems. Proposed in 1637, it was finally proven by Andrew Wiles in 1994, closing a 300-year-old gap in mathematical knowledge. Fermat's Last Theorem ( x n + y n = z n ๐ฅ ๐ + ๐ฆ ๐ = ๐ง ๐ ): Considered the world's most famous and difficult problem for centuries, it was solved by Andrew Wiles in 1994 using modern techniques (modular forms and elliptic cu
*the class was in shock and awe at your answer*
From the memory
6 Memories
vin_33
13/02/2026