You might’ve noticed I’ve been a little quiet over the past few days and it’s because I’ve been working on something awesome over for the past few weeks.
I JUST MADE A GAME!!!!
(Well, technically it’s more of an educational website, but still, it’s super fun!)
It’s called Hello Hiragana! and it’s designed to help you learn how to read Japanese Hiragana, which is around 40% of the entire Japanese language!
But what makes this app different from all the other language apps out there?
Well, It’s colourful, interactive, and filled with quizzes that test your knowledge in a fun way, so much so that you might not even notice you’re learning!
And believe me, after just 20 minutes or less, you’ll likely be able to read 5 to 9 Japanese characters confidently!!!
And at the very end?
You’ll unlock a final challenge, a real mini-game where you’ll put your new skills to the test by reading actual Japanese words used in real life, not just letters!!!!!
I just launched it, and it’s FREEEEEE!!
It would mean the world to me if you could check it out and let me know what you think!
👉 Click here! (all devices)
👉 Click here (Android devices only)
(Also, could someone let me know if the download works on your device? That would help a lot, thank you!!)
Hi, congratulations on your creation! This comment is long ( heads up I guess) and I tried the game. I actually don’t understand how to play/ use this. Im wondering if somehow I got caught in the middle of it. Some direction would be great. I actually have some Japanese things I would like to be able to read.
I have interest in Japan as I was born there. I came to the us as an infant but my family lived there for 6 years. My dad was a pathologist, his specialty was thyroid cancers. Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivers of that had a huge raise of thyroid cancers. My dad figured out that this was rarely, if ever the cause of death, it wasn’t even a contributing cause. This eventually changed the way we were treating it in the past. At that time the treatment was many thyrodectomies, targeted radiation so very invasive treatments. The medical profession wasn’t to happy at the time but the research he did eventually took hold as more studies. So this saved many children from getting a treatment that was not necessary. So go dad, though I miss you. I wish we could talk! ( he passed over the winter) . He was ready.