MARU: Learn Japanese Hiragana Reviews

5/5 rating based on 352 reviews. Read all reviews for MARU: Learn Japanese Hiragana for iPhone.
MARU: Learn Japanese Hiragana is free iOS app published by Overdreamer, LLC

Surprisingly amazing

KJ0929

This app is amazing and helped me learn Hiragana in one day and helped me learn Katakana in the next two days after that. I love the fact that the developer of this game is awesome so he didn’t fill the app with adds. The only adds you get are punishment adds which is when you get five drills wrong and your punishment is one add. Thank you Alexander Hsu for being awesome and making a great app that helped me start my quest to be fluent in Japanese. FIVE STARS!!!


Excellent App

Mmbe2224

This app is perfect to review hiragana and katakana. Love it!


Simple and effective!

Dudebro88

This app is superb, it does what it needs to do, no gimmicks, simple and effective!


Great!

kimmcheee

So useful and simple!


Love this app. Free and remind everyday. Awesome

Hdhandjcnd

I been learning because repeat practice.


Very Helpful

MandoMike95

Awesome app, simple but very clean UI and works great!


AN AWESOME APP!!!

Joseph.D.T

This app is great for studying the most used symbols of hiragana and katakana. Yes it may not have all of them in it, but it was super helpful to me for memorizing. I love this app. I rate it five star even though there are two down falls and things I feel that could be added or improved such as adding the rest of the hiragana and katakana chart in there. I also think they should add more learning features as in learning vocabulary or grammar and how to form small sentences. But I understand that it’s just a small app, I just love it and I’m excited to see improvements.


very good

gothcowboyprince

best app so far for memorizing kana. its completely free and i love it


This App is Dope

iamjackscolin

That’s it. Just Dope af


Twenty years of in the game...Still the same...

Pxlman

I started learning Japanese back before smartphones (ancient times of 2001). I drilled katakana and hiragana into my head in the backs of coffee shops and pizza places before and after class. I have been inspired to pick up my studies again but I want to re-lay the foundation. Now I have this app. This does all the work that the flash cards I made did and more. I feel as excited as I did twenty years ago and now I don’t have to carry a heavy stack of disintegrating paper stock bound together by a rubber band rolling around my Jansport. I can grind on the ‘kana using the same thing I use to pay my bills and watch silly videos. What a world.