We believe the hardest part of learning English isn't remembering vocabulary. It's whether you're still willing to try again — after work, on the bus, in the ten minutes before your child wakes up.

Why now

For a long time, a one-on-one tutor was the only way to train listening, speaking, reading, and writing as a complete loop — and it was priced for the wealthy. AI changed the math. For the first time, a tutor who hears your pronunciation, checks your sentence structure, and remembers what you got wrong last Thursday is something any commuter can afford.

How we think

Mistakes are learning moments, not failures.
  1. 01

    Encourage, don't intimidate

    Confidence compounds. We celebrate small wins loudly and forgive mistakes quietly, because the hardest skill in language learning isn't grammar — it's coming back tomorrow.

  2. 02

    Progress must be visible

    Streaks, XP, retention curves, mastery levels. We make your progress large and satisfying, because you deserve to see how far you've come.

  3. 03

    Content is king

    The interface should step aside. Sentences, audio, and vocabulary take the stage. Buttons, chrome, and decoration stay out of the way.

  4. 04

    Playful, but trustworthy

    Learning should feel like a good game, not a casino. We gamify motivation, never knowledge. The content stays rigorous.

What we made

When you open Loopy, the first thing isn't drilling vocab — it's reading English you actually understand. The words you don't know slip into tomorrow's review, paced by your memory curve. Want pronunciation practice? AI grades you word by word. Want listening? Dictation flags the sounds you missed. A short quiz confirms it stuck. It looks like five modes, but it's really one loop — one that remembers what you did last step and knows what to fix next, not five separate tools that don't talk to each other.

Every word, every grammar thread you touch gets woven into a visual knowledge graph — the first time you actually see what your English looks like. And every Monday morning, a learning letter lands in your inbox — the kind a cram-school teacher would write if they'd actually been paying attention to your week: what improved, what to revisit, all on one page. This is what makes Loopy different from the other apps.

If you've got thoughts, questions, or a better way to do any of this, write to us at . We read everything.

Or use the contact form →See what it costs →
Made for anyone still learning.