Features · Sessions
Five minutes counts
You don’t need an hour to make progress.
Loops that fit real life — a quick break or a long walk with headphones.
Rhythmica fits a coffee break or a long walk with headphones — 5 to 10 minutes when that's all you have, or an hour of background replay when you want maximum exposure. Regular contact beats the session you keep postponing.
5–10 min · one loopMarathon lessons vs. quick sessions
Hour-long lesson · all or nothing
Hard to start, easy to skip
- Needs a big block of free time and full attention
- Miss a day when life gets busy—and momentum drops
- Feels like homework, not a habit you can keep
Five-minute loop · fits the gap
Progress without the guilt
- One conjugation, one track—done before the kettle boils
- Stack sessions when you have time; one loop when you don't
- More exposure beats rare cram sessions for long-term retention
Microlearning that actually sticks
Language learning rewards time on task — and Rhythmica makes that easy at any length. Each loop stays tight: one theme, one musical track, low cognitive load. Pair that with favorites and Rhythm Journey so the reps you do actually show up as progress.
Why flexible sessions work
Focused content, your schedule sets the length — minutes or hours.
Your length
Five minutes between meetings or an hour on a walk — both count. No timer telling you to stop.
One focus
Each session centers on a conjugation or theme—no sprawling lesson plans.
Background replay
Screen optional. Keep listening while you cook, commute, or wind down.
More exposure
Got five minutes? One loop. Got an hour? Queue favorites and keep the music going.
Moments that fit a quick loop
Pick any gap—same account, same progress, wherever you are.
Tips for quick sessions
- No timer — queue favorites and listen for as long as you want.
- Only have five minutes? One solid loop still counts.
- Same track on repeat is fine—favorites and journey XP reward the reps you actually do.
- Background audio fits commutes, chores, and long walks alike.
Steal five minutes now
Pick a tense, loop one track, and call it a win.