As someone who loves both coding and learning Japanese, I’ve always wished there was an open-source, truly free tool for learning Japanese, kind of like what Monkeytype is in the typing community (fun fact: we actually have 2 Monkeytype devs on board with us now!)

Unfortunately, most language learning apps these days are either paid or closed-source, and the few free ones that are still out there haven’t really been kept up to date. I felt like that left a gap for people who just want a straightforward, open-source, high-quality learning tool that isn’t trying to milk them and/or sell them something.

That being said, I didn’t want to just make another “me too” language app just for the sake of creating one. There needed to be something special about it. That’s when I thought: why not truly hit it home and do something no other language learning app has done by adding tons of color themes, fonts and an extremely fun and customizable experience, as a little tribute to the vibe that inspired me in the first place, Monkeytype.

So, that’s what I’m doing now. We’ve already hit half a thousand stars on GitHub and reached thousands of Japanese learners worldwide, and we’re looking to grow our forever free, open-source platform even more.

Why? Because Japanese learners and weebs deserve a free and genuinely fun learning experience too.

Live demo: https://kanadojo.com/

If you wanna make our day by dropping us a star or even contributing, then you can do so here --> https://github.com/lingdojo/kana-dojo ^^

どもありがとうございます!

  • TastehWaffleZ@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    Grammar problems solved.

    It took me a while to be able to tolerate the voice but it’s the single best resource for learning Japanese grammar. The video creator passed on but they are by far the best teacher I’ve ever come across

      • TastehWaffleZ@lemmy.world
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        18 days ago

        Yeah, it’s rough, I almost quit five mins into the video and I told my wife it’s the most grating thing I’ve ever heard. After finishing the first and second video I was able to tolerate it and concepts that I had read about but never understood were clicking left and right.

        I later realized it might have been because the video creator was sick and was constantly in and out of hospitals so using an artificial voice may have just made everything easier and made me feel bad for being judgy.

        I’m not super far in the series yet but there’s put out so many amazing videos, there’s problem sets with answers, and the comments are filled with personal anecdotes where the creator answered DMs to questions in a very in-depth and patient manner.

        There’s almost no fluff to the videos after the first one, they’re very concise and the explanations make so much sense. It’s easy to read things like “wa is the topic marker, ga is the subject marker” and not gain any clarity, but I finally understand it thanks to the vids. I’m sure one day I’ll finish the series and wish I could hear more