
Speak. Practice. Connect.
How to Play?
Voice Practice connects you with another language learner somewhere in the world for a live, one-on-one voice chat — so you can practice speaking out loud the moment you feel like it. No scheduling, no signup, just talk.
Tap to connect. Press Start, allow your microphone, and we match you with another learner who's online right now.
Start talking. Say hello and go — chat about your day, your hobbies, or the language you're both learning. It's just two voices, live.
Meet someone new anytime. Hit Next to leave the current chat and instantly connect with a different learner. Mute when you need a moment, and Stop when you're done.
Stay anonymous. No names, no profiles, no recordings — conversations are live and disappear the moment you leave.
This feature builds real speaking confidence
Reading words and tapping the right answer will only take you so far. Real fluency comes from producing the language yourself, in real time, with another person on the other end waiting to understand you — and that's the part a textbook or quiz simply can't give you. Every conversation trains three skills at once: pulling words out of memory under a little pressure, shaping the sounds with your own mouth, and understanding a real person's accent and rhythm. That combination is exactly what turns "I know this word" into "I can actually say it," and it's the fastest way to get over the fear of speaking to someone new.
Best for learners ready to use their words
Once you've picked up some vocabulary — say, after exploring a few planets in Space Explorer — Voice Practice is where you put it to work. You don't need to be advanced. You just need a handful of words and the willingness to try. Even short, simple exchanges like "Hello, where are you from? What are you learning?" build momentum quickly, and talking with someone who's also learning takes the pressure off making mistakes. You're both there for the same reason: to practice.
Common mistakes learners make
A few habits hold beginners back more than they realize:
Waiting until you feel "ready." There's no perfect moment. The learners who improve fastest start speaking while they still feel a little shaky.
Going quiet when stuck. A pause is completely fine — giving up isn't. Try a simpler word, slow down, or just say you're not sure. Keeping the conversation alive is the practice.
Falling back on your native language. It's tempting, especially if your partner happens to share it. Push to use the language you're learning, even when it's slower and clumsier.
Treating mishearing as failure. Repeating yourself, asking "again, please?", working through a misunderstanding — that isn't a mistake, that's a real conversation, and it's where the learning actually happens.
Tips to improve faster
Keep a few openers ready. Memorize two or three simple questions so you never freeze at the start of a chat.
Stay one exchange longer. Each time, try to push just a little past the point where you'd normally want to leave.
Repeat what you hear. Echoing your partner's words out loud trains your pronunciation and helps new phrases stick.
Practice a little and often. A few short conversations through the week beat one long, nervous marathon.
Be kind and patient. Everyone on the other end is learning too. A friendly, respectful chat is better for both of you — and that's exactly the kind of space Voice Practice is meant to be.













Works perfect!