The Torah’s forbidden birds — every Hebrew and Aramaic source brought verbatim, every modern identification graded by how strong its evidence actually is, and the machlokes over whether the count is twenty-four or twenty-three.
Every complaint and rebellion of Klal Yisroel in the midbar — what happened, how Hashem and Moshe answered, what Moshe was mispallel for, and what it cost — with the machlokes over which fall among the ten nisyonos.
All the countings of Klal Yisroel on one sheet — the eight counts in the Torah, the countings in Nach, and the one still to come, le’asid lavo — with the midrash of the ten countings brought as written.
The 44 sources of tumah — avi avos, avos, and toldos — what each one is, what it makes tamei, how far the tumah travels, and the way back to taharah.
Which mark is tahor, which needs hesger, and which is muchlat — the step-by-step din of negaim of the person, of clothing, and of houses.
Every mum that pasuls a kohen or a korban — each term with its sources brought as written, and an honest accounting of what is and is not known about what it means.
The avodos of the Kohen Gadol from morning to night, as a departures board — following the Rambam’s seder, with a toggle for the Mishnah’s. Hebrew interface.
Which locusts are kosher and how to tell — arbeh, sol’am, chargol, and chagav, the leaping-leg simanim, and a checker to work through a specimen.
What horns tell you about kashrus — the simanim that distinguish a chayah from a beheimah, keyed to the horn’s anatomy.
Every plant named in Maseches Kilayim — the Mishnah and Rambam brought as written, what each plant is according to the scholars who studied them, and why the pairs are or are not kilayim with one another.
Every shitah for each zman of the day — degrees, fixed minutes, sha’os zmaniyos, horizon — computed live for your location, with the sources for each method inside.
Which haftarah is read when — the weekly haftaros, and the special Torah readings and haftaros of the moadim.