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Afapp is a digital practice app for aphasia therapy. Its core use case is not online video courses in the traditional sense, but multimedia language rehabilitation training delivered via Android tablets, Windows tablets, or laptops. According to the materials, it is designed to help people with aphasia improve their language abilities, and can also serve as a tool for speech therapists to enrich therapy activities.
The courses/training areas focus on adult aphasia language rehabilitation, including naming, combined reading and listening, listening comprehension, text comprehension, phrase matching, sentence matching, phrase completion, and sentence completion. The app displays images and text and plays recordings by real speakers. Some tasks can provide first-letter or syllable hints, and the app can give feedback on whether answers are correct. The extended content mentions more than 500 exercises across 27 categories, while the basic module includes around 300 words in 12 everyday-life categories. The format is interactive in-app training, not live classes, recorded video lessons, or 1-on-1 instruction.
The basic exercises are free and have no time limit. Extended exercises can be purchased from the official website’s digital bookstore; the stated price is 98 Polish złoty per year. They can also be purchased inside the Android app via Google Play as an annual auto-renewing subscription. Workbook codes expire after one year. Most PDF work cards are free, and their license is not time-limited. Device requirements are Android 7 or Windows 10 or above, with a screen resolution of at least 1280×800; tablets over 10 inches are recommended. iPad is not supported. An internet connection is required for download and installation, but exercises can be used offline after being downloaded.
Its strengths are the relatively low price, the ability to try the basic version, offline availability, and exercises based on practical everyday vocabulary, making it useful for both home rehabilitation and as classroom support for therapists. The Microsoft Store version has also passed platform security checks, lowering the barrier to installation. The downsides are that the content is clearly in Polish, and there is no information about certificates, a structured course path, or human guidance. Subscriptions and workbook codes are time-limited. For users in China, Google Play, BLIK, and Polish electronic bank transfers may all be inconvenient.
It is better suited to Polish-speaking people with aphasia, caregiving families, and speech therapists who need digital support materials. It is not suitable for users looking for general language courses, certificates, or Chinese-language rehabilitation content. The materials do not state how accessible it is from China, so it is unclear whether the official website can be accessed directly. The Android subscription depends on Google Play, which may limit practical use in some cases. Alternatives to consider include Tactus Therapy, Constant Therapy, Lingraphica, or localized training materials provided by rehabilitation departments and speech therapists in Chinese hospitals.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on better-software.eu official site.
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