Practice Real Conversations in the Language You're Learning
Real-Life Practice for Everyday Conversation
No flashcards, no dictionary drills. You're dropped into a real social moment — a train, a café, an interview. Every reply is in the language you pick, with translations. Choose with emotional intelligence and watch their interest glow green.
How the simulator works
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Read the scene, pick a reply. Each turn offers three psychology-based choices — in your language, with translations.
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Watch the interest meter. Charming, high-EQ replies make it glow green; awkward ones stall it yellow; aggressive ones send it red.
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Learn from the breakdown. Win or lose, you get a psychological analysis of your choices — plus phrases you can use tomorrow.
Elena, 23
Reading on the train
Random Conversation Practice: Train for the Moments You Can't Script
Real life does not announce its conversations. The recruiter calls while you are making coffee; the interesting stranger sits down next to you on a delayed bus; your date goes quiet halfway through dessert. That is why this page deals you a random scenario instead of letting you rehearse one comfortable script on repeat. Every conversation simulator session drops you somewhere new — a job interview, a first date, a networking mixer, a gym, a bookstore — and scores the choices you make under mild surprise, which is exactly the condition your social skills have to perform in outside the simulator.
Why random beats repetition
Replaying one scenario teaches you that scenario; shuffling them teaches you the pattern underneath — open warmly, ask real questions, read the other person's reaction, close with a clear next step. Skill researchers call this varied practice, and it is the difference between memorizing answers and being able to improvise good ones in any conversation.
What a session looks like
You read the scene, pick one of three psychology-based replies, and watch the interest meter respond — green for warm, emotionally intelligent moves, red for pushy or dismissive ones. Win or lose, you get an honest breakdown of every choice plus useful phrases, in the language you are practising, with translations. A round takes about two minutes; nobody is watching you fail.
One habit, every skill
Because the deal is random, a daily round quietly rotates you through interview answers, first-date warmth, small talk with strangers and online chat openers — the same six skills the communication test measures. Ten minutes a day covers more social ground than an hour of studying any single situation.
Random practice — common questions
Is random conversation practice better than picking a scenario?
They train different things. Picking a scenario is rehearsal for a known event — a real interview on Friday deserves the interview module. Random practice trains adaptability: the ability to be warm, clear and confident when you did not see the situation coming, which is how most conversations actually arrive.
Can I practise in a foreign language?
Yes — every reply can be shown in the language you are learning, such as English or German, with translations and guidance in your own language. You practise the phrases people really say in interviews, dates and small talk, not textbook dialogues about buying stamps.
Is it free, and do I need an account?
The simulator is free and works as a guest — press play and a scenario is dealt immediately. Signing in adds the game layer: XP, levels, streaks, friend comparisons and a profile that shows which skills are improving over time.