Qeeebo Encyclopedia Passes 5.3 Million Entries, Offering a Simpler, Faster, Kid-Friendly Alternative to Wikipedia

Every entry includes a plain-language "For Kids" summary and one-click citations in every major format - built for students, teachers, and researchers of all ages.
- Abilene, TX (1888PressRelease) June 29, 2026 - Qeeebo today announced that the Qeeebo Encyclopedia has passed 5.3 million entries, establishing an accessibility-first alternative to reference platforms like Wikipedia and the newer Grokipedia. Where traditional encyclopedias serve a single, dense version of every topic, Qeeebo is built around a simple idea: the same knowledge should be readable by a curious ten-year-old and a graduate student alike.
Every Qeeebo Encyclopedia entry presents knowledge in layers. A short Quick Read delivers the gist in about a minute. A plain-language "For Kids" summary restates the same topic at a lower reading level, so younger students and early readers can follow along. A Full Article goes deeper for advanced readers, supported by glossaries, key facts, and cross-references between related topics - all on a single, fast-loading page.
Qeeebo also makes attribution effortless. Every entry includes one-click citations in every major format - APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, IEEE and more - so students and researchers can drop a correctly formatted reference straight into a paper without leaving the page.
"Encyclopedias haven't really changed in twenty years - they're dense, one-size-fits-all, and written for adults. We wanted to make knowledge that's simpler and faster: open any topic and instantly get it at the level you need, whether you're nine or ninety," said Andew Daminani, Co-Founder of Qeeebo. The format is designed with classrooms in mind. Students and researchers get clean, citable summaries; and lifelong learners get a faster way to grasp a topic without wading through pages of detail.
"Our goal from day one has been an encyclopedia that's truly more useful for academics of all ages - easier to read, faster to use, and ready to cite," said Greg Gordon, Co-Founder of Qeeebo. "Wikipedia proved the world wants free knowledge. We think the next step is making that knowledge accessible to everyone, even at a lower reading level."
The Qeeebo Encyclopedia is free to browse and search, with no account required, and continues to expand its catalog.
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