India, May 28 -- For thousands of Delhi University (DU) aspirants who have just finished the Common University Entrance Test (CUET), relief is quickly turning into confusion about what comes next. Which college and course will they be allotted, and what does the Common Seat Allocation System (CSAS) mean? Admissions can be difficult to navigate, and private counsellors are charging anywhere from a few thousand to over Rs.10,000 for limited sessions and PDFs. To bridge this gap, 25 current DU students have launched CUET Decoded, a free peer-run initiative across colleges and departments. (9671964852) The initiative offers free webinars, live Q&As, and one-on-one guidance, both online and offline. Students can ask questions in groups, connect directly with mentors, or simply listen in. "Most students only start thinking about the practicalities after the results. By then, they are panicking. The planning has to start now, while there is still time to be rational about it," says core member Digvijay Singh Sulekh. For aspirants like Priya Chandrakar from Raipur, Chhattisgarh, the biggest challenge has been the lack of on-ground information about the city. "I do not know Delhi at all. I had no idea which colleges are in which part of the city, what the areas around them are like, or whether they are safe. Getting that information from a student who actually studies there is different from reading a list online. I even got guidance on metro routes and accommodation options near the colleges I am considering," she says....