Vladyslav C.

Vladyslav C.

Solo dev & English teacher
3 points

Forums

The unfiltered truth behind this launch

  • I didn t just build an app . I ve been using Anglomova live in my 1-on-1 lessons for almost 3 years. More than 100 real paying students were forced to be my guinea pigs (sorry/not sorry). Their recordings, mistakes, and breakthroughs wrote every line of this curriculum.

  • Every single lesson, dialogue, and workbook page was written or vetted by me a flesh-and-blood CEFR-certified teacher not scraped, not GPT-bulk-generated. That s why it actually works, and also why it took forever.

  • C1 C2 levels are massive. Like, stupidly massive. Only ~60 % uploaded so far because hand-crafting native-like nuance at that level is brutal. The rest is coming, I promise.

  • Anya isn t a 24/7 voice chatbot yet. Right now she s your merciless judge: listens to your speaking, instantly breaks down pronunciation/grammar/fluency, and throws the next perfect exercise at you. Real-time casual chat is on the roadmap when I can afford the inference bills.

  • This is still a rough diamond. Polish, animations, bug fixes, and full C2 need time + money. If you try the beta today and feel even 1 % of the finally, someone gets it vibe my students felt your upvote or a purchase literally turns this passion project into a proper masterpiece.

Vladyslav C.

2mo ago

ANGLOMOVA - Structured English courses with Anya AI. Boost all skills.

I’m a full-time English teacher who got tired of watching students waste years on “just speak more” apps that have zero curriculum. So I taught myself to code and built Anglomova from the ground up – alone, no team, no funding. Anglomova is a complete CEFR-aligned A1–C2 curriculum matrix with thousands of interconnected lessons, real-world scenarios, and adaptive paths.
Nika

8mo ago

What are the best apps/tools for learning languages? + Your experiences and struggles

The last 2 or 3 years, I have been trying to learn more foreign languages besides English.
My go-to app is (not surprisingly) Duolingo.

I have also experience with Memrise, but it didn't feel like a good fit.

I find these apps to help learn vocabulary or for keeping up with a language I've previously learned in other ways (for example, from a language school or online lessons), but not necessarily for learning at a conversational level.