A complete JLPT course — N5 all the way to N1 — that lives entirely on your phone. No account, no ads, no subscription, and no server that can go away.
Grammar is taught in the order a Japanese teacher chose. Each lesson walks eight words up a ladder — meet them, recognise them, build them, then produce them cold.
A twenty-chapter graded-reader mystery written with only the words and grammar you're learning — furigana on every kanji, tap for the English, audio, and questions that feed your reviews.
Timed and sectioned like the real paper — vocabulary, grammar and listening — generated fresh from your level every attempt, scored with the exam's own pass rule.
Benkyou uses FSRS, the modern scheduler behind Anki, to bring a word back exactly when you're about to forget it. One review list, whether you learned it in a lesson or won it in a game.
Trace all 1,938 kanji with a guide, then from memory. Recognition is half of reading; production is the other half.
Hear a word and type it. Record yourself and compare. Half the JLPT is listening — most apps skip it.
Karuta, Shiritori, the Yamanote game, kana sudoku, a word search with no word list. Every one feeds the same schedule, so playing is studying — and a game can only ever help.
The melody of a word, drawn right over the reading in the dictionary — the thing almost no app shows, and the difference between reading Japanese and sounding like it.
Back it up to a folder you choose, restore it on a new phone. It's a plain file. Nothing is sent anywhere, ever.
“Every grammar sequence, translation and category was chosen and checked by a practising secondary Japanese teacher.”
Made by a teacher, not generated by a machine.