How does this work?

The most natural way to learn a language is to be surrounded by it — not drilling grammar rules or memorizing flash cards, but just encountering it constantly, in context, in stories you actually care about.

That's the idea behind Langlora. You pick a story world — a mystery, a thriller, an adventure — and you read. The language is always just slightly within reach: familiar enough to follow, new enough to stretch you. Tap any word you don't recognize for an instant translation. Listen to every line in native audio. Make choices that shape the story.

You don't need to know your "level." You can dial the language up or down — simpler or more complex — whenever you feel like it. Think of it like adjusting subtitles on a show: you don't study the subtitles, you just watch.

New vocabulary sticks not because you drilled it ten times in a row, but because you encountered it in a moment you remember — a tense scene, a character you liked, a twist you didn't see coming. That's how memory works.

No theory, no homework. Just read.