- Category: Education
- First released: June 15, 2009
- Versions: 1 archived
- Installable: 1 of 1
- Seller: EuroTalk
- com.eurotalk.chatnow.019
Requirements: Compatible with iPhone and iPod touch. Requires iOS 3.0 or later.
Archived Reviews
8 of 13This application is actually fun to use and keeps your attention. However, it is has several limitations. Great for the beginner but you will definitely need something more comprehensive. Also, I would love to have seen some type of calculator for word mastery.
I purchased this app for my kids as a basic introduction into Mandarin Chinese. They love it and enjoy it! It's also great for adults who want to learn Chinese.
Update: February 2012<br/><br/>Still waiting for new words and categories... I love this app, but please add more.<br/><br/>Update: April 12, 2010<br/><br/>Please add more words and phrases. The learning method behind this app is amazing, and there were plenty of words to start with...but I've learned everything included in the app up to this point and am hungry for more. Please add a many more words and phrases asap. Thanks!!<br/><br/>Original Review:<br/>This is an amazing app to learn mandarin. I own 5 of the other top 5 apps and unlike many of the other apps, this one is makes leaning even more fun. Many of the other apps are great, but flashcards can only take you so far. This app creates a game out of learning, and is very interactive. It also keeps my attention, and doesn't get boring.<br/><br/>I hope the developer continues to add even more words and phrases. There's plenty to learn in the app, but even more categories and perhaps different difficulty levels would make this a 5+ star app. Please keep expanding this app!
Pretty usefull, could use some more variety in the games and features though. Maybe when you flip the card you can see the character as well? Hopefully there will be additions to the vocabulary library as well. Besides that this is a great way to memorize vocabulary and a few phrases are included also.
Love the games, wish there were more modules. :)
The good:<br/>-The audio is very good quality. When they say HD, they mean it.<br/>-The games are good for memorizing vocabulary.<br/><br/>The bad:<br/>-There are variations in tone when the male and female voice say some of the vocabulary. Since Mandarin is highly tonal, this can cause some serious confusion! Because of this problem, I'm left wondering what the correct tone is.<br/>-It would be nice if the games weren't as similar.<br/>-There isn't enough vocabulary to be worth the $9.99 price.<br/><br/>So is this app worth it? I'd recommend it if the tone problems were fixed and more vocab was added.
Very similar to the rossetta stone methodology. Learn by pictorial memory games that tell you the sound of the word/phrase. Mostly for learning vocabulary. It was useful for me since I'm learnig mandarin to be able to speak with my mother in law. It's a fast way to learn some useful words. However it has two major flaws:<br/><br/>-not enogh phrases, mostly vocabulary.<br/>- crashes sparingly<br/><br/>The crashing doesn't happen often, but it has happenend a few times while on 'game mode'. Overall I'm satisfied with the product and it's a good alternative for those who want to learn the language. Has both Chinese characters and pinyin.<br/><br/>Rcommendations for improvement:<br/>- it'd be great if the software could analyze your voice recording and tell you weather or not you're doing the 'tones' correctly.<br/>-also the 'hard' game doesn't help you learn much because it is more of a memory game. It would be cool to have a game where you would have to say the word corresponding to the image shown.
I found this app to be very, very good. I hope this review does help in a decision for others to purchase (or not) this app. This app is quite frankly the best one I have found... so far, and meets it's intended target purpose. To give you a limited vocabulary and phrase list, making this limited words and phrase list "yours" (hearing and speaking up to normal speeds) and leave you wanting to learn more.<br/><br/>I read with interest Jaime Shuminski's well written piece a few reviews back (from Nov. of 2011). Jaime's review has glowing things to say about this app, all of which I agree wholeheartedly with. I do disagree however with Jaime's assessment of the differences in the tonal quality (or lack thereof) in the male playback of the pronunciations. If one listens to native speakers (both in country or in language tutorials), female chinese speakers simply DO enunciate more clearly the tonal inflections of Mandarin (which is so very important as Jaime points out). <br/><br/>This app addresses proper tonal listening and speaking techniques very cleverly in three ways. The first is when you are going down the word practice list or during the games, then you replay your desired word or phrase, the app alternates between the female and male speaker each replay. You can do it as many times as you want during word practice or even during some games without being penalized (unless it is one of the timed games). I found this to be very useful. Then there is the "slow down" feature (a small turtle icon). It reduces the playback speed of a word or phrase, but does not alter the pitch of the voice so it still sounds natural. This slowdown feature reveals the tones the untrained western ear will probably miss most of the time at native speaker spoken speeds. A nice touch. Then of course the pinyin spelling of all vocabulary is presented with each game or lesson objective, which shows the proper tones of words for you.<br/><br/>The speakers in this app are clearly native speakers so I don't think Jaime's negative critique on this one aspect of the otherwise glowing review was telling the whole picture. Clearly Jaime's ear correctly discerned the tonal differences of the spoken word between the genders. Kudos for that observation. Most would not notice. But it is what it is when listening to "real" Chinese.<br/><br/>My only complaint? Like all the others, the short list of lesson categories. But that is told up front before purchase. (to Eurotalk's credit, they do point out in it's description of the app that the list is short, focusing on a "less is more" aspect to increase ability in speed of use). So I guess that my real complaint is not with this app AT ALL. It's just that there is no more lessons to buy to add to the already excellent feature set. This is the only "wish list" I have. More "category modules".<br/><br/>The price of admission was well worth it and I'll pay more for "encores" to add to the nine categories (275 words and phrases) already there. I appreciate the continued "bug fixes" (of which I have never encountered, it appears very stable) and the little enhancement tweaks still continuing with this app. But I and others would really like to see more lessons than anything else. Eurotalk's uTalk Chinese (Mandarin) has hooked my kids and I enjoy using this with them.
Period reviews recovered from Apple's customer-review feeds via the Wayback Machine.