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Inku vs Lingopie

Inku vs Lingopie for Japanese

Lingopie teaches through TV shows and native media. Inku teaches through spaced flashcards. Immersion vs drill.

BBao HuaUpdated April 21, 202612 min read

Short answer

Lingopie streams Japanese shows with interactive subtitles. Inku delivers actor-recorded flashcards with FSRS scheduling.

Category: Media-based language appPricing: $12/mo, $67/yrSince: 2019

Intro

Lingopie is the TV-through-Japanese app. You watch shows, tap words for definitions, and build a vocabulary from real media. Inku is the opposite: you build vocabulary from flashcards, then watch Japanese media later with less help. Two methods, same destination.

When Inku is the better pick

  • You are a complete beginner. Lingopie's shows assume you know kana and some grammar. Inku teaches both from scratch.
  • You want efficient vocabulary acquisition. Flashcards move faster than subtitled TV. Inku's 10-minute session covers more new vocab than a 30-minute show.
  • You do not have time to watch shows daily. Inku fits in a 10-minute coffee break. Lingopie requires a show-length commitment.

When Lingopie is the better pick

  • You learn better through real media than flashcards. If flashcards bore you and shows energize you, Lingopie wins. Motivation matters more than pedagogy.
  • You want cultural exposure. Watching Japanese TV gives you cultural context, slang, and real-world conversation flow that flashcards cannot.

Feature-by-feature

FeatureInkuLingopieWinner
FormatFlashcardsTV shows
Beginner-friendlyYes, from zeroAssumes kana + N5
Time per session10 min20-40 min
Real media exposureNoYes
Cultural contextLimitedStrong
Pricing$29.99/yr$67/yr

Inku's favor · Lingopie's favor · roughly even

The honest take

Lingopie is the tool for intermediate learners who want to boost input while enjoying real shows. It is probably too ambitious for day-one beginners. Inku is the opposite end of that arc.

Verdict

Use Lingopie if: you are at N5+ and want immersion through TV. Use Inku if: you are starting from zero or want focused flashcard practice.

Inku first, Lingopie around month 6.

From a learner

I came from this app, bounced off, and Inku gave me something I could actually finish. That is the whole pitch.
A learner who tried Lingopie first

Common questions

Can a total beginner learn from Lingopie?+

With effort, yes, but it is slow. The subtitles assume you can read kana and have some vocabulary.

How much Japanese is on Lingopie?+

A solid catalogue, mostly dramas and documentaries. Growing but smaller than Spanish or French.

See more comparisons: all comparison pages. Or start with the full learning roadmap.

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