Our next big game: “The Cube”!

New year, new game!

Yes, we at DOMA Games have started work on a new puzzle game idea.

We call it “The Cube”, and, in essence, it will be a 3D maze game. More precisely, it will be a 3D spaceship maze, where you can manipulate the environment. In addition, there will be items to collect; including various tools to help you achieve your goals and overcome obstacles.

Your challenge is to get to the next level and safe the spaceship from exploding. Are you as excited as we are? If so, the first MVP is ready to be played, and, whilst still very much a work in progress, we have played through it a few times and we’re hooked already.

Sign up today and join us on the journey as the first cohort to play this exciting new puzzle game!

Photo by Soulful Pizza from Pexels

Perpetual practice makes perfect

After taking a short break from practising my verbs every day, I am pleased to say I am back to my daily practice. I even caught up on the verbs that were ready for review and waiting to be looked at for a few weeks. Big round of applause!!!

Spanish Verb Conjugation home screen

What did I learn from this though?

First of all, I was surprised by how many days I’d missed! The progress report page gives me a clear indication of when I was practising the verb of the day, learning a new verb or revising previously learned verbs. I thought I’d only missed a few days, possibly two weeks, whilst moving house – BUT – to my surprise, I didn’t have any gold stars for nearly 6 weeks! Shame on me!

Second, catching up with revising previously learned verbs is harder than I thought. The main challenge was knowing that I had to do more than my usual workload to get on top of it. So, rather than my usual workload, I tried to double it. After a few days, I noticed that I was making progress, and, before long, I was back on track.

Third, whilst revising previously learned verbs, I didn’t learn new verbs in order to manage my workload. I am now back to learning verbs again, and I am happy about it. It feels as if, at long last, I am making actual progress.

I can’t wait for the holidays to turn my daily practice into a habit and keep improving my Spanish Verb Conjugation with perpetual practice!

What is the best way to learn a language: Intentional learning

One of our users, let’s call her Jane, has provided us with feedback that she is only looking at the end of the verb to guess the correct conjugation.

OK. Let’s see what we can learn from this comment.

Jane is right in that this is one way of revising your verbs every day. It is a quick and dirty way to “get through it” too. However, it is not a great way of learning, never mind retaining what was learnt.

Sometimes, I find my mind wondering, and, similar to Jane, I only check the verb endings. However, I then find that, if I later test myself, I can’t conjugate the verbs correctly. Why is that? It is because I simply let the words pass in front of my eyes without actually taking anything in. I did not actually learn anything.

A better way of using our Spanish Verb Conjugation learning game is to learn with intention. Some aspects of intentional learning in the Spanish Verb Conjugation context are:

  • Be deliberate and motivated to learn
  • Set a specific goal every day e.g. complete the word of the day
  • Focus on reading the whole word – not only the ending
  • Say each word out loud (or just in your head) to practice pronunciation
  • If your mind wonders, bring it back to the game

That’s very much achievable.

Intentional learning is being used in the corporate setting e.g. McKinsey reports career advantages, as well as by the World Economic Forum. If it’s good enough for them, it sure is good enough for me.

Which type of learning will you choose from now on?

Download our Spanish Verb Conjugation game from the Google Play Store:

Chapurrear – “to speak a language badly”

What a great word of the day: chapurrear. It means to speak a language badly, or more precisely, to speak a language with great difficulty and making mistakes whilst at it.

We have all been there at least once. As a baby, you try your best to pick up how to form sounds that you hear around you. Over the years, you learn how to form words. Finally, you learn to put them into the right order to create sentences. Voilá! You have learned your first language. Well done!

Then comes school and (often) the need to learn a second language. This time round, you have the help of qualified teachers who start with vocabulary and grammar. If you are lucky, they throw in some pronunciation. The process of learning the second language seems a tedious task of endless repetition and rote learning. If you felt the same way, you are definitely right.

Why is it so much harder to learn a language at school?

It is harder because it deals with chunks of grammar which are not necessarily intuitive. You often don’t think about grammar when speaking your own language. Another reason why it feels harder, is timing. It takes most people around 15 to 20 years of speaking a language “naturally” all day, every single day before they are on top of their game.

When you learn a foreign language at school, depending on where you grow up, you may have 5 years of 2 hours a week for 25 weeks a year. That’s only 250 hours of classroom training! If you’re lucky you may get 9 years, or, if, after school, you go to university to study a foreign language, you may get as many as 15 years of 5 hours a week. That’s not even 2,000 hours of classroom training.

According to the US Foreign Service Institute, 600 to 750 hours is the minimum needed to learn a language that is similar to English (including Spanish!) Think about it: 750 hours is not even 9 weeks if you are learning all the time (like children do in their homes) for 12 hours a day. That’s the big difference! Learning a foreign language is hard because we try do it in only a few hours a week.

That is also the reason why tools like the Spanish Verb Conjugation game help to solidify your knowledge quickly and effectively. By spending only 15 to 20 minutes a day practising (around 2 hours a week) you’ll quickly learn many important and interesting Spanish verbs and how to conjugate them correctly. You can then also spend time reading a Spanish book or watching Spanish news or television to supplement your online learning.

Personally, I use the Spanish Verb Conjugation game to revise and learn whilst waiting for something e.g. waiting in the queue at the supermarket, waiting for the train to arrive, or simply waiting for that one friend who’s always late (if you don’t have one, could it be you?). This way, I can make the most of my time AND learn Spanish at the same time. It has already helped me to make a lot fewer mistakes, sound more fluent, and feel more comfortable.

So, what will you do today to stop “speaking Spanish badly”?

Download our Spanish Verb Conjugation game from the Google Play Store:

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.domagames.spanishverbconjugation

Success: We resolved the invalid AVG threat alert

Yesterday, we reported that an invalid AVG threat alert was shown on our users’ phones. This has now been resolved. Our Spanish Verb Conjugation game is now whitelisted and no more alerts are showing on AVG. We are also proactively going through the same process of being whitelisted by other anti-virus companies.

We hope you enjoy our Spanish Verb Conjugation game: a fun, effective learning tool for mastering the art of conjugating Spanish verbs.

Spanish Verb Conjugation feature graphic

You can download it here:

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.domagames.spanishverbconjugation

Thanks for reporting this issue to us. Please always feel free to get in touch on feedback@doma.games and let us know about any issues you come across. We will address them as quickly as we can.

RESOLVED: Invalid AVG threat alert is being worked on

Update: The invalid AVG threat alert has been removed. Read more here.

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We value your privacy, your data and your independence. That is why we would never ask you for data or collect data from you. In fact, we don’t store any of your data at all. Moreover, we can’t even access the data you have on your phone. Only you can. You can read this on our Google Play Store Data Safety section.

Furthermore, we don’t request additional Android permissions. Other than your private learning database and settings, we don’t install or write anything to your device. You simply install our game via the Google Play Store, who also checked our game against their high standards of programming. No further access or permissions are required.

Remember, we don’t burden you with ongoing subscriptions or annoying ads. When you buy our games, you pay one price at the start and that is that. The game is yours forever. Even if we were to disappear, you would still be able to play the game without any ads forever.

That is why it came as a shock when we were informed that AVG was warning our users that our game is a threat. The message looked like this screenshot:

False AVG threat alert

The issue is that AVG is using a “whitelist” whereby each app which is not on this list is given a black mark next to its name and the threat message is shown. This happens to a lot of apps and games on the market and we happen to be one of them. 

We are working with AVG to be placed on the whitelist in order for the threat label to disappear. Our game will not change and neither will your access to it.

Remember: We will never ask you for information and we will never collect any data without asking.

Please let us know via feedback@doma.games if you see similar messages or anything confusing on your phone so that we can resolve them as quickly as possible. 

Thank you!

Today’s Word of the Day is ser: to be!

Wow! Today’s Verb of the day is ser: the most important Spanish verb. Ser is the English verb “to be”. Actually, Spanish has two verbs for “to be”: ser and estar. Learning the difference is one of the biggest challenges when learning Spanish. However, the main difference is ser means to permanently be for example: él es español (he is Spanish), because your nationality doesn’t change. While estar implies that something changed, for example: estoy en España (I am in Spain), because you weren’t in Spain earlier.

Ser is the most frequently used verb, and it is often the first verb which new students of Spanish learn in school. Ser is also one of the most irregular verbs with exceptions in the present tense, both past tenses, and in both the subjunctive and imperative moods. Of course, in English, the verb “to be” is also the most frequently used verb, and one of the few irregular English verbs.

What does this mean?

It means that learning the verb ser is likely to take a little longer, because there are more irregular spellings to keep in mind in comparison to regular verbs such as hablar (to speak). Given how often the verb is used, it is necessary to learn the conjugation and get it right.

Screenshot: verb ser (to permanently be) in our Spanish Verb Conjugation Pick From Three game.

If you want a fun and effective way to practice the conjugation of ser and 3,660 other Spanish verbs, head over to the Google Play Store  and download our Spanish Verb Conjugation game now:

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.domagames.spanishverbconjugation

Go live of our Spanish Verb Conjugation game!

Our Spanish Verb Conjugation game is now released!

You can download it here:

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.domagames.spanishverbconjugation

Spanish Verb Conjugation is a fun learning tool for mastering the art of conjugating Spanish verbs. Your goal is to select the correct conjugation for the selected tense and specified person. To win a round, you must choose 20 correct conjugations whilst making less than 3 mistakes.

Spanish Verb Conjugation feature graphic
Spanish Verb Conjugation game screenshots

It includes all of our 3,660 verbs in order of priority; that is more than one word a day for 10 years! It includes the conjugations for the 10 most important tenses for all of these verbs. And, it sells for a one off cost of just £11.99 or equivalent (US$12.99, €14.99). There are no adds, no in-app purchases, no subscriptions, no further payments ever. Compare this to some other offers: even a book of just 501 Spanish verbs costs three times this!

Let us know what you think and get in touch with us on feedback.svc@doma.games.

Happy learning!

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.domagames.spanishverbconjugation

Finishing touches before go live: Spanish Verb Conjugation

Yes, you heard right. We are putting the finishing touches on Spanish Verb Conjugation before releasing in the next few days.

Spanish Verb Conjugation feature graphic
Screenshots from our game:
Flower game (left)
Learn New Verb in order or priority (right)
Select Tenses settings (top middle)
Pick From Three game (bottom middle)

We are specifically checking over the definitions of reflexive verbs that differ from the non-reflexive version of the same verb.

Some are easy such as vestir means to dress (someone) or to wear (something) and vestirse means to get dressed or put on some clothes. Other reflexive verbs are less straight forward. For example, agarrotar means to “to squeeze tightly” and agarrotarse means “to become stiff”.

We are checking all our verbs against official sources such as the RAE which is short for Real Academia Española (or Royal Spanish Academy). It is the definitive source for the correct use of Spanish, and it publishes a complete dictionary. We also use WordReference and even Google Translate. Once we have confirmed the best translation, we update the verbs as needed.

Our FAQs are finished already and we are putting videos in place to help you get the hang of the game quickly.

What else would you want us to come up with before publishing?

UPDATE: You can now download the Spanish Verb Conjugation game here:

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.domagames.spanishverbconjugation

So close and yet so far!

About a month ago, we had only two bugs left to fix. They are fixed now! YAY!

What a great feeling to be so close to releasing our Alpha candidate. Close means we are not over the line though. As we worked through the previous bugs, we noticed some areas we could polish whilst we were at it. The usual unexpected paperwork and challenges with artwork added more delays.

In other words, our new planned release date for Alpha is this week Friday and all signs are positive we’ll get it done.

We’ll keep you posted!

UPDATE: The game is live and you can download it here:

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.domagames.spanishverbconjugation