But if it's just for fun, and you don't seriously expect to reach fluidity, I think Duo is probably not bad for that. And that's not a bad thing, learning a language is a huge commitment. If you want more, you'd need someone willing to go one on one with you or you could continue with more traditional methods until you reach the point of being able to follow at least shows for small children like Peppa Pig and eventually onto actually interesting stuff.
What language are you learning?
türkish, just for fun little interactions with my döner-guy 🥙🙂
I love everything about this
And now I want a Berlin kebab
See my other comment: https://thelemmy.club/comment/6489647
For Turkish unfortunately there isn't a lot of beginner resources. But some are trying to build some currently. https://comprehensibleinputwiki.org/wiki/Turkish
But if it's just for fun, and you don't seriously expect to reach fluidity, I think Duo is probably not bad for that. And that's not a bad thing, learning a language is a huge commitment. If you want more, you'd need someone willing to go one on one with you or you could continue with more traditional methods until you reach the point of being able to follow at least shows for small children like Peppa Pig and eventually onto actually interesting stuff.