Launching today

VoiceCards
Speak, listen & memorize — voice-first flashcards
8 followers
Speak, listen & memorize — voice-first flashcards
8 followers
Speak, listen, and memorize anything. Turn your notes, photos, and PDFs into voice flashcards — speak your answers for instant feedback or study hands-free in Listen mode. Your decks live in your own Google Sheets. For language learning, exam prep, and any subject worth memorizing.




Hi Product Hunt! Maker here.
VoiceCards started from a simple observation: you can recognize a flashcard answer and still blank when you have to actually say it. So every review in VoiceCards is spoken: say the answer out loud and speech recognition grades it, or flip to Listen mode and your deck becomes hands-free audio that keeps playing with the screen off.
A few things I'm proud of:
- Your decks live in YOUR Google Sheets. Edit in a browser, no lock-in, and we never copy your data to our servers.
- AI card generation: snap up to 10 photos of a textbook or attach a PDF up to 40 MB, and you get a ready deck in about a minute.
- Questions and answers can each have their own voice, even in the same language, so listening drills feel like a conversation.
- Free to study, no subscription. One-time credit packs only for premium voices and AI features, with regional pricing in 20+ countries.
It's already used daily by language learners, exam preppers, and one truck driver who memorized an aviation engine manual with it.
I'd love your honest feedback, especially on the listening experience. Ask me anything!
Would love a way to share decks with study buddies directly in the app, even if it just generated a link to import a sheet. Studying with friends always keeps me more accountable, and right now the workflow feels pretty solo.
@keremkazlmqir Love this, Kerem — studying with friends is exactly the accountability I want to support. Quick workaround today: since every deck is just a Google Sheet, you can share that sheet with a friend and they can pull it in with the app's "import from URL" option. You're right it isn't one-tap yet though — a proper in-app deck share/import flow is on my list. Are you picturing 1-on-1 study buddies, or a bigger group?
Would love to see a spaced repetition mode built in, so the app actually schedules when to quiz each card based on how well I answered. That would make it way more useful for long-term exam prep and take the guesswork out of when to review what.
@ahinlbeyliphnw Great callout, Sahin. There's a light version today — smart shuffle biases toward the cards you keep missing, and the Today's-5 quest resurfaces older ones — but it's not a full per-card schedule like SM-2. A proper spaced-repetition mode is one of the most-requested things I'm weighing; the tension I'm chewing on is keeping it voice-first and simple instead of turning into a scheduling dashboard. Is it exam-deadline prep you'd use it for, or open-ended long-term retention?
The Google Sheets integration is genuinely clever, keeps everything editable without locking you into another app. Tried it with a vocab deck and the listen mode was easier on my eyes than scrolling through cards.
@elif70947542524 Thank you, Elif! That's exactly the itch behind the Sheets choice: your deck is a spreadsheet you own, not rows trapped in our database. And I'm really glad Listen mode was easier on the eyes for you, that hands-free pass is the part I lean on most myself. Are you studying a language, or something else?
the google sheets integration is honestly such a clever move, like you actually own your data instead of it being trapped in some app. spoke a few vocab cards and the instant feedback caught me off guard in a good way.
@erol364714 Appreciate that, Erol! Data ownership was the hill I wanted to die on, edit in a browser and it syncs straight to your phone, no export dance. And that 'caught me off guard' moment is exactly why Speak mode exists: recognizing a card and actually producing the answer out loud are two very different muscles. What were the vocab cards for?