Games to help you learn russian




















Note: there are three games, but you don't necessarily need to play them in order from one to three. They can each be played on their own. Although the first one is really starting to show its age. Since the Witcher was based on Slavic Polish mythology, the game comes to life with Russian audio. So I highly recommend you turn on the Russian. Another great thing about the Witcher series is that the games are already popular.

So chances are that you've played them before. This might seem like a bad thing, but it's actually a good thing. The games have a high replay value, and the fact that you already know the plot more or less makes it a LOT easier to understand it when it's only Russian.

These zones exhibit strange phenomena, that are not understood by scientists. They bring new dangers to those that enter them. Also, there are weird, but valuable, artifacts to be found. The Stalker games are based on Roadside Picnic.

And in the games, you play a Stalker that's what they call the guys who go into the restricted zones and try to loot valuables. In the games, you'll walk around the zones, fight with mutants and other stalkers. The games are a bit older, but can be a lot of fun. Another good thing is that there are many side missions, so you can make the game as long as you'd like.

You have to discover what is going on and how to stop it. You can play as one of three characters, the Bachelor, Haruspex or Devotress. Available on Steam for PC. You control a vast territory between the NATO bloc and the Warsaw Pact countries, and the task is to build your own Soviet republic, transforming it from a collection of rundown towns and settlements into a prosperous superpower. An important aspect is the sale and purchase of goods and resources on international markets, on which the welfare of the nation directly depends.

In addition to solving global problems, players can enjoy the realistic landscapes and Soviet architecture and transport from the s to the s. Welcome to an alternative in which almost nothing remains of the USSR and the Western bloc after a nuclear war.

You play an agent from the secret organization ATOM, whose mission is to penetrate the Soviet Wasteland in search of a special unit that was sent to explore a mysterious bunker. In one of the first tasks, the agent locates an armed gang that raped and killed the daughter of a local resident. At times, the game lurches from the apocalyptic to the absurd and obscene. On the contrary, the mixture of trash and sleazy jokes in a post-apocalyptic Soviet setting in the style of Fallout only adds to the escapism and enjoyment.

If using any of Russia Beyond's content, partly or in full, always provide an active hyperlink to the original material. This website uses cookies. You can study all you want, but to really understand a language, you need to practice applying it.

Listening to Russian learning podcasts and reading Russian learning blogs lets you see Russian words in action, and games can do the same. Rather than connecting Russian words to English words you already know, you can often use games to connect Russian words directly to the objects and ideas they name. This will help you skip the step of translating between Russian and English in your head. And actually, there is a service that can provide to learners similar benefits like the ones listed above, although in a different way.

FluentU takes authentic videos—like music videos, movie trailers, news and inspiring talks—and turns them into personalized language learning lessons.

You can try FluentU for free for 2 weeks. Click here to check out the website or download the iOS app or Android app.

With that kind of attitude, you can probably get far in your Russian language learning and have fun the whole way through! Digital Dialects offers a nice array of free games on a wide variety of topics including the alphabet, greetings, numbers and other basic vocabulary. Most games will help beginning and intermediate students build and practice their vocabulary.

However, there are also some vocabulary quizzes for more advanced learners. Yet another app for building up your vocabulary - with which you can learn up to 20 new words a day. You can add the words which you think you will need to a dictionary, as well as learning random words suggested by the app - from pronouns to complex terms.

This app is for people who already have an extensive vocabulary but do not want to stop there. Every day, the app will suggest a new word to learn with a brief definition - usually a difficult and long word. Learners who almost fully understand the Russian language, both in its oral and written forms, can finally relax.

For this, developers in Siberia have come up with a meditation app, Siberian Breath - it will teach you to perform breathing exercises and meditate using the recorded sounds of Siberian forests, lakes, waterfalls and winter snowdrifts. The interface is in Russian, naturally. If using any of Russia Beyond's content, partly or in full, always provide an active hyperlink to the original material. This website uses cookies.



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