Stop Freezing. Start Responding.
In just 2 weeks, get ready for real travel situations in Japan. Understand fast Japanese, reply in seconds, and feel confident at the convenience store, station, hotel, and more.
“I can’t wait to have conversations with Japanese.”
Do fast questions at convenience stores or stations make you freeze?
Most textbooks teach polite self-introductions. Real life in Japan is different. Staff speak quickly, and you have only a few seconds to catch questions like “Do you need a bag?”, “Would you like this heated?”, or “Which train are you taking?”
This course trains you for those real moments — so you can understand what is happening, respond naturally, and enjoy your trip more.
No more smiling and nodding when you did not catch the question.
Build the response speed you need for the travel situations that happen every day in Japan.
Simple daily practice that fits real life.
Each day, you get a short lesson, practice your response, and receive feedback. No complicated app. No busywork. Just practical training you can actually use on your trip.
1. Watch (5 min)
Get a short daily video lesson based on real travel situations: convenience stores, stations, cafés, hotels, shopping, and more.
VISUAL INPUT
2. Practice (Voice)
Use the prompt and send a voice message with the answer you would actually say in that moment.
ACTIVE RECALL
3. Get Feedback
Get personal feedback on how to sound more natural, more confident, and more ready for real conversations.
EXPERT FEEDBACK
See what one lesson feels like before you join.
Watch a short sample lesson and see exactly how the training works.
What you’ll see in the free trial
- How the daily WhatsApp lesson is delivered
- What the short training video looks like
- How the voice-message practice works
- How simple and practical the daily task feels
Your 2-Week Survival Japanese Roadmap
Start with the most common travel situations and build step by step until you can handle everyday interactions with more confidence.
Day 1: Convenience Store Basics
Learn to handle the 3 key questions at the register—bags, chopsticks, and heating—and master the universal “Magic Tool” **onegaishimasu**.
Day 4: Review ① (Days 1–3)
No new phrases today! Test your reaction speed by mixing scenarios from the convenience store, café, and payment situations.
Day 7: Hotel Check-in
Handle front desk interactions like a pro. Learn to ask for the Wi-Fi and use the “Magic Tool” **~te mo ii desu ka?** to ask for permission.
Day 10: Shopping & Fitting Rooms
Master shopping etiquette: learn how to say you’re “just looking” and use your tools to ask to try on clothes or touch items safely.
Day 14: Final Check
The ultimate test. React to 6 mixed prompts covering everything from directions and restaurants to lost items and small talk.
Carefully Selected Survival Phrases
Focus only on the high-impact situations and phrases that travelers actually need to survive and thrive in Japan.
Special Launch Pricing
Join the monitor program at a special early price and help us improve the course for future learners.
Monitor participation
As a monitor, you agree to provide one form of feedback after the program. You can choose the option you feel most comfortable with in the application form.
- A written review
- A short video testimonial
- A short Zoom interview
- Permission to use part of your voice assignment as feedback material
Your course access is not affected by which option you choose.
ONLY 5 SPOTS
Early Bird Monitor
For the first 5 students. Get the full 14-day experience at a special launch price.
- Full 14-day curriculum
- Personal voice & text feedback
- PDF cheat sheets
Standard Monitor
Join at the regular monitor price once the early spots are filled.
- Everything in Early Bird
- Feedback in PDF (easier to save)
30-Day Master Program
A deeper version with more scenario practice and a final 1:1 Zoom session.
- More advanced travel scenarios
- 1-on-1 Zoom final check
Enjoy Japan way more just with less than US$80? Would it be worth?
I went to Germany last year to attend a wedding. I learned German for half a year before that.
I couldn’t speak that much, but I am so happy that I tried my best.
I was able to say what I wanted to say. I was able to shop at a convenience store, ask where the toilet is.
English still works of course, but it is DEFINITELY more enjoyable if you know the local language even a little.
I am planning on the full course which will be a month (5 days a week) in the near future, so this is a monitor one.
I would like to use the voice of yours 🙂