u/RewardOk248
After months of work, StepFlow is almost ready!
Hey everyone!
I've been working on StepFlow for the past several months, and I'm finally getting close to launching it. I recently polished the overall look and feel of the app, and I'd love to hear what you think about the lesson flow shown in this video.
StepFlow is expected to launch between July 18th and July 20th.
If you're interested in downloading it when it launches, send me a DM preferred. or leave a comment and I'll make sure you get the link when it's available.
The app includes a free experience, with optional premium features for users who want to unlock everything.
I'd really appreciate any feedback. Thanks for watching!
Instead of Memorizing Words, Try This
I've been working on a new review system for StepFlow, and this is one of the review modes.
Instead of showing you the entire translation at once, the app reveals one phrase at a time. This encourages active recall rather than passive reading, making it much easier to remember complete sentence patterns.
The goal isn't just to memorize words—it's to help you think in natural phrases and remember entire sentence structures.
I've already posted videos showing the main lessons and other features of the app, so if you're curious about how the complete learning experience works, check out the other videos on my profile.
I'd love to hear your thoughts! Does this review method look useful? Is there anything you'd change?
If you'd like to try StepFlow when it's ready, leave a comment or send me a DM, and I'll let you know as soon as it's available.
After Months of Work, Here's the Language Learning App I'm Building
I'm currently building StepFlow for English ↔ Spanish learners.
The core lessons are free, and I'd love to hear what people think.
If you'd like to try it when it launches, please send me a DM so I can reach out when it's ready. If you're more comfortable leaving a comment instead, that's perfectly okay too.
Building My English ↔ Spanish Learning App (StepFlow)
I've been working on a new language learning app called StepFlow.
It's designed for English speakers learning Spanish and Spanish speakers learning English.
Instead of memorizing random vocabulary, you learn through meaningful sentence patterns, one step at a time.
Here's a quick look at one of the learning activities. I'm excited to keep building it!
Building My English ↔ Spanish Learning App (StepFlow)I've been working on a new language learning app called StepFlow. It's designed for English speakers learning Spanish and Spanish speakers learning English. Instead of memorizing random vocabulary, you learn through meaningful sentence patterns,
Would you enjoy learning Spanish this way?
I'm almost finished building my English → Spanish app, StepFlow, and I'd love to know if this feels like a fun way to learn.
Imagine you open your first lesson.
🇺🇸 English
"Who is that person?"
🇪🇸 Spanish
¿Quién es esa persona?
The app doesn't immediately quiz you.
Instead, you tap each meaningful phrase to explore what it means.
🟦 ¿Quién
→ Who
🟦 es esa
→ is that
🟦 persona?
→ person?
Once you've explored the whole sentence, the app asks you to build it using those same chunks.
Then it zooms in and teaches each chunk.
For example:
🟦 es
🟦 esa
↓
✅ es esa
After you've learned each chunk, you build the entire sentence from individual words.
Only then do you move to the next conversation sentence.
After every two conversation sentences, the app gives you a quick checkpoint using only those two sentences before continuing the conversation.
The goal isn't to memorize isolated vocabulary—it's to help learners naturally understand and form real sentences they can use in everyday conversations.
I'm getting close to launching StepFlow, so I'd love to know: does this learning flow feel natural to you?
Would you enjoy learning Spanish this way?
I'm almost finished building my English → Spanish app, StepFlow, and I'd love to know if this feels like a fun way to learn.
Imagine you open your first lesson.
🇺🇸 English
"Who is that person?"
🇪🇸 Spanish
¿Quién es esa persona?
The app doesn't immediately quiz you.
Instead, you tap each meaningful phrase to explore what it means.
🟦 ¿Quién
→ Who
🟦 es esa
→ is that
🟦 persona?
→ person?
Once you've explored the whole sentence, the app asks you to build it using those same chunks.
Then it zooms in and teaches each chunk.
For example:
🟦 es
🟦 esa
↓
✅ es esa
After you've learned each chunk, you build the entire sentence from individual words.
Only then do you move to the next conversation sentence.
After every two conversation sentences, the app gives you a quick checkpoint using only those two sentences before continuing the conversation.
The goal isn't to memorize isolated vocabulary—it's to help learners naturally understand and form real sentences they can use in everyday conversations.
I'm getting close to launching StepFlow, so I'd love to know: does this learning flow feel natural to you?
What if every sentence was taught one meaningful chunk at a time?
I've been building a language learning app with a different philosophy, and I'd love to hear what you think.
Imagine opening your first lesson.
Instead of seeing a random list of vocabulary, you're given a complete sentence:
> "Esta foto fue tomada en una boda." This photo was taken at a wedding.
The app doesn't ask you to memorize the whole sentence at once.
Instead, it breaks it into meaningful pieces:
Esta foto → This photo
fue tomada → was taken
en una boda → at a wedding
You explore each chunk individually, hear the pronunciation, see the meaning, and understand how each piece contributes to the full sentence.
Then the learning changes.
Instead of moving on, the app asks you questions about one chunk at a time. You answer until you've mastered that meaning before unlocking the next chunk.
Once you've learned every piece, you rebuild the entire sentence from memory.
By the end, you're no longer looking at three separate chunks—you naturally understand:
> Esta foto fue tomada en una boda.
The goal isn't just to remember vocabulary. It's to understand how complete ideas are constructed and to make building sentences feel natural.
Later, the app brings back entire conversations and exercises using spaced repetition, so you're reviewing meaningful language instead of only isolated flashcards.
At the moment, StepFlow is focused exclusively on English ↔ Spanish while I continue building the content and learning system. I want to get that experience right before expanding to additional languages.
I'm genuinely curious:
Would you rather learn by mastering complete conversations piece by piece, or by memorizing individual words first?
I'd love to hear what experienced language learners think.
Why don't more language apps break sentences into meaningful chunks?
The more I think about language learning, the more I feel like we've got the order backwards.
Most apps start by teaching individual words and phrases, hoping you'll eventually build conversations from them.
What if the starting point was the conversation itself?
Imagine learning a conversation by breaking it into meaningful chunks, understanding each piece, rebuilding the sentence step by step, and then reviewing the entire conversation later instead of only reviewing isolated vocabulary.
Do you think that would help you remember and actually use the language better?
I'm curious what other Spanish learners think.
Why don't more language apps review entire conversations instead of just flashcards?
I've been building a language app called StepFlow, and I wanted to solve one problem I kept running into.
I could remember vocabulary, but I'd forget how to use it in actual conversations.
So instead of focusing only on flashcards, StepFlow teaches through connected conversations that progress level by level. It also has two separate spaced repetition systems:
• One reviews vocabulary and phrases.
• The other brings back entire conversation exercises when you're about to forget them.
The goal is to remember complete conversations, not just isolated words.
The first release will support English ↔ Spanish while I focus on making that experience as polished as possible before expanding to more languages.
I'd love to hear your thoughts.
Would reviewing complete conversations help you learn Spanish better than reviewing individual words alone?