1
Pick a scene
Start with a real situation, not a random word list.
Scene-based · Quick · Effective
Practice useful vocabulary in short, fun games. Remember more. Use it confidently.
Scenes
Choose a situation, meet a character, then practice the words you will actually need in that moment.
Cafe counter
Practice a short cafe exchange with Mira, then choose useful words like latte, receipt, and takeaway in context.
"Can I get a latte to go?"
"Sure. Would you like a receipt?"
How it works
LexiPlay turns vocabulary into tiny scene loops: context first, active recall second, confidence after repetition.
1
Start with a real situation, not a random word list.
2
Answer fast prompts, match meanings, and hear mini-dialogues.
3
Combos, streaks, and milestones make repeat practice visible.
4
Review the words later and reuse them in real conversations.
Interactive demo
Learners do not memorize isolated cards. They choose a scene, read a short exchange, pick the missing word, and get instant feedback from the main character.
Cafe Ordering
"Can I get a ___ to go?"
Pick an answer to see how feedback changes.
Made to help you stick
The main character reacts to wins, mistakes, streaks, and hints so learners always know what happened and what to try next.
Confirm the word and repeat it in the scene.
Reward quick recall without interrupting the round.
Make daily progress visible and worth returning to.
Nudge learners back to the scene instead of giving up.
Keep the tone light and explain the difference.
Scene cast
LexiPlay can introduce words through people with clear roles: baristas, hotel staff, classmates, pharmacists, coworkers, and friends. That makes the language easier to place and recall.
Barista
Airport staff
Receptionist
Pharmacist
Coworker
Friend
Why learners come back
"The cafe and travel scenes made the words feel immediately usable. I remembered the phrase because I remembered the character."
Busy learner"Combos make practice feel like a game, but the dialogue keeps it connected to real life."
Beginner English student"The hint system is gentle. It points me back to the scene instead of just marking me wrong."
Self-study learnerFAQ
Clear answers for the product promise, learning flow, and content design.
Yes. It is designed for learners who want practical everyday words and short phrases before moving into longer conversations.
A scene gives the word a purpose, speaker, and likely next action. That context makes recall easier than memorizing translations alone.
They create lightweight motivation around consistency and fast recall, while the actual learning stays grounded in dialogue.
Yes. The role-based character system is built to expand into new places, jobs, relationships, and daily routines.