slowly inch your way to mastery: try, fail, learn, get good
6 learning modes cover - in theory - all you need to know to truly get good at a new language. Reading, writing, listening, pronunciation, conversation and language understanding. Each exercise uses vocabulary and grammar that you're slightly insecure in, so you can make mistakes, understand why and get a bit better every day. The learning algorithm is based on the "forgetting curve" and "desirable difficulty" research from neuroscience.
On a motorbike trip through the Vietnamese mountains I stayed in small villages. Kids there have internet and phones - yet no one to teach them English.
Back in the cities almost everyone I talked to about learning a language told me some version of "I'm trying the apps, but it's not going great".
I started tutoring people in my native language, German, for 1.5 years and built neuralingo in multiple iterations, testing methods in the 1:1 sessions and including the most effective ones.
2 of our students have passed official B1 & B2 exams, 2 have passed job interviews in German and one is now working there in a medical job.
I'm not sure yet if neuralingo will work at scale, but I'm hoping more people will test it out and share what still needs fixing to achieve that.