Some universities and libraries purchase educational resources from content creators. Check your university’s library database or learning management system to see if they have a license for his materials.
Armando Hasudungan’s "notes" are not typical bullet-point summaries. They are hand-drawn, highly visual flowcharts and diagrams that break down diseases into their core components:
Each drawing uses a color-code system (e.g., red for inflammation, blue for blood flow) that makes memorization intuitive. His YouTube channel (over 1.5 million subscribers) features time-lapse videos of him drawing these notes while explaining the science. However, students often want the final static image—the finished PDF—to review without watching a 15-minute video. Armando Hasudungan Notes Pdf Free
Armando excels at showing how the body works as a system.
He sells individual PDF packets on Gumroad (e.g., “Cardiology Notes,” “Renal Notes”) for $5–15 per pack. That’s less than a coffee and a sandwich for a semester’s worth of study resources. Each drawing uses a color-code system (e
We analyzed Reddit threads (r/medicalschool, r/step1, r/medicalschoolanki) to gather honest feedback:
"Armando’s notes saved me for renal physiology. I failed my first quiz, then spent a weekend drawing along with his PDFs. Got an A on the final." – u/medstudent2024 "Armando’s notes saved me for renal physiology
"The free PDFs from random sites are always missing pages. Just pay the $5 on Patreon. It’s cheaper than failing Step 1." – u/step1survivor
"I don’t learn from reading textbooks. Armando’s drawings are like SketchyMedical but for pathophysiology. Worth every penny." – u/visuallearnerDO
Many medical school libraries have institutional access to paid resources. Ask your librarian if they have a subscription to Armando’s content. Also, check with your student union—some purchase group licenses.