High-intent answers

Start with the questions people ask before they trust you.

These pages are not brand manifestos. They are direct answers for search, AI, and high-intent users.

Already have data and want to start now

Start here if you already have raw files from WeGene, BGI, 23andMe, or another provider.

Common question

Why not just use the report from WeGene or BGI?

Because those products solve testing and report delivery. Fern Gene solves what can keep happening after the raw file is back in your hands. These two layers stack instead of replacing each other.

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Already have data

Can I use raw files I already got from WeGene, BGI, or 23andMe?

Yes. If the raw file is still in your hands and the format is usable, Fern Gene can pick up the long-term value from there.

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Privacy

Will Fern Gene upload or store my raw genome files?

Not by default. The main Fern Gene path keeps raw genome files on your own device, runs analysis locally, and keeps a more compact encrypted profile instead of the raw file itself.

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Compatibility

What file types and platforms does Fern Gene support today?

Phones start with txt, VCF, gVCF, and .genomesprofile. Heavier BAM and CRAM flows are better on desktop. The main phase-1 path starts with iPhone, Android already passed real-device validation, and macOS / Windows are better for desktop import and heavier files.

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Long-term value

How can one test keep getting more useful over time?

Your genome changes very little, but the interpretation keeps changing. Fern Gene does not repeat the test. It keeps attaching newer interpretation to the same file.

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Need sequencing first? Choose the lab correctly

Start with raw-file delivery and retrieval, not with the polish of the bundled report.

Key concept

Why do raw files matter so much?

Because the value of sequencing should not end with the first report. Only when the raw file comes back under your control can that test stay useful later.

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Need sequencing first

If I have not tested yet, how should I choose a lab?

The most important decision is not how polished the bundled report looks. It is whether you will really be able to keep standard raw files afterwards.

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Raw files

Who especially should keep their raw files?

If you already tested, are planning for marriage or pregnancy, care about family history, expect longer-term medication decisions, or want future interpretation, you should care more about keeping the raw files in your own hands.

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Marriage, pregnancy planning, family history, and long-term health

Start here if your questions are about partner review, family history, longer-term risk, or medication differences.

Coverage

What can Fern Gene already cover today?

There are already 17 result areas live today. The first ones most people feel are medication, health risk, hereditary disease, WGS specialty review, and nutrition.

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Marriage / pregnancy planning

What is partner review?

It lets two people run a joint review without exchanging raw genome files, which makes it more practical for marriage, pregnancy planning, and family-history decisions.

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Family history

If disease already runs in the family, why look at this layer too?

Because family history becomes more useful when it sits next to your raw files. Fern Gene is not making the diagnosis for you. It helps keep the directions worth confirming in front of you.

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Medication

Why can the same medication work differently for different people?

Because the same medication can be absorbed, processed, and tolerated differently from one person to the next. Fern Gene works best when those differences need to stay visible over time.

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Long-term risk

If my checkups look normal today, why keep looking at longer-term risk?

Because a checkup answers what is happening now. Genetics is more about which directions are worth keeping visible over time. These two views work on different time scales.

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Start with the basic concepts

If you are still getting clear on SNPs, raw files, and why one test can stay useful, begin here.

Basic question

What is a SNP, and why would I care?

A SNP is a common single-letter difference in the genome. One SNP does not define your life, but many SNPs together can help explain medication response, risk, and metabolism.

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