Learn Japanese Bundle: The Complete Beginner to Advanced Course (Levels 1-5)
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Nur 0,99 € pro Monat für die ersten 3 Monate
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Want to learn and speak Japanese?
And go from zero and all the way up to conversational fluency?
The bad news? No single audiobook will get you to fluency.
The good news? A bundle of audiobooks will.
Introducing Learn Japanese Bundle: The Complete Beginner to Advanced Course (Levels 1-5).
This complete Audiobook bundle is a fast, fun, and easy way to pick up Japanese, regardless of your age or learning experience.
- Learn Japanese through everyday Japanese conversations
- Get the conversations explained in simple English
- 10-minute lessons—perfect for busy learners
- All lessons made by native Japanese teachers & voice actors
- Immerse yourself in Japanese conversations anywhere, anytime
- Over 115 hours—from Absolute Beginner to Advanced
- Read along & never miss a word with a companion PDF
- Aligned to the CEFR & JLPT
While most apps just teach you words, Learn Japanese Bundle: The Complete Beginner to Advanced Course (Levels 1-5) teaches Japanese through useful, everyday conversations so you can have those same conversations in fluent Japanese.
Just imagine:
- Chatting about the weekend with your Japanese friends.
- Ordering food at a restaurant in confident Japanese.
- Or simply asking for directions on your next trip to Japan.
- And getting there is easier than you think.
Here's how this audiobook bundle makes learning fast, fun, and easy:
1. Fast—You start speaking minutes into your first lesson.
You speak in minutes because lessons are around 10 minutes long. No need to study for months or years. You'll be speaking the same exact Japanese phrases you've heard in the lesson dialogues.
2. Fun—You learn from real conversations between real native speakers.
Want to impress native speakers and crack jokes in fluent Japanese? When you're learning from real native speakers, you get to do just that. You'll pick up cultural nuances and phrases that only native speakers know... just by listening along.
Oh—and no grammar drills, memorization, or fake AI voices.
3. Easy—The easiest way to pick up Japanese is...to listen!
And that's how you learn here. Just press play and listen—on your commute, on a walk, or at home. In each lesson, you hear an everyday conversation. Then, our teachers translate and explain every word. You'll absorb real Japanese effortlessly.
About Learn Japanese Bundle: The Complete Beginner to Advanced Course (Levels 1-5):
- Contains 21 JapanesePod101 Audiobooks
- 10-minute audio lessons from Absolute Beginner to Advanced
- Over 115 hours of lessons and dialogues total
- Includes a companion PDF for reading along
So, if you're looking for the best way to learn and speak Japanese from Absolute Beginner to Advanced, grab this audiobook bundle right now.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
©2025 Innovative Language Learning, LLC (P)2025 Innovative Language Learning, LLCThe early lessons usually include a short dialogue, a podcast-style discussion about the grammar, and then the review track. The bundle consists of several audiobooks that were likely available for purchase separately. As you progress through them, certain elements are intentionally removed — for example, at higher levels, English explanations disappear, assuming that by then you can understand the grammar discussions in Japanese. From the upper-intermediate level onward, you mainly get the dialogue and the full vocabulary list in the review track at the end of each episode.
Sometimes you’ll even hear lines like “See you next week!” or “Raishuu ja mata!” — reminders that these were once weekly podcast episodes. That’s not really my preferred way of learning languages, but I understand the concept: if you give yourself time between lessons to absorb the material, it can work. You listen to the text, try to catch new words, maybe jot them down, and when the translation comes, you get that “aha” moment — learning almost effortlessly. Unfortunately, audiobooks are typically used differently. Simply compiling a bunch of lessons into one long audio file doesn’t make it an audiobook — it just doesn’t work that way.
With one simple adjustment, though, it could have worked better: if the vocabulary came before the dialogue (or if the dialogue were repeated after the review track), and with more repetition overall. Around the intermediate level, most grammar points are revisited at least once, so occasionally an earlier concept reappears several audiobooks later. That repetition definitely helped my Japanese — even though I wasn’t actively studying each episode, just listening passively for hours (sometimes up to six in a row).
Another topic is the teaching style. In nearly every episode, Naomi-san is the teacher, and another host interacts with her. Personally, I found Jessy-san the most professional, but soon Peter Galante took the lead. His goal was to make the lessons livelier, more entertaining, and more fun. However, if his style doesn’t suit you, you might find him difficult to listen to. My least favorite part, though, was one of the review track narrators who tried to make the vocabulary lists sound less dry by reacting with “ah yeah” after words like “popular among women” or “dating.” You can even hear someone laughing in the background. It feels awkward — almost cringe-worthy — and makes me feel awkward too, listening to someone fake an over-the-top reaction just because the word “date” appears.
Sometimes the lesson texts themselves don’t sound as professionally written as those in a standard language textbook. For example, one story involves a man who buys an octopus as a pet, only for it to die when he takes a hot bath upstairs. It’s clearly meant to be humorous, but it just comes across as odd rather than funny.
The audiobook costs about €9 with a subscription, but around €90 without — a huge difference. It’s definitely not worth €90, but for €9, I’d say it can still be a valuable resource for Japanese learners. As I mentioned earlier, the quality isn’t comparable to a professional language textbook, so it’s better to view it as quantity over quality: the more Japanese you hear, the more your ear gets used to the language. At roughly 120 hours of content, that makes sense.
That said, the same publisher — Innovative Language Learning — also offers similar bundles for other languages, such as Hungarian, with only about 40 hours of audio at the same price. If those follow the same format, I’m not sure even €9 would be worth it.
At some point, this company must have thought, “We really need an aggressive marketing strategy.” If you register on their website without paying, you’ll start receiving daily emails that you can’t unsubscribe from. The audiobook’s description also makes bold claims — promising conversational fluency, effortless learning, and so on. But in reality, without the accompanying PDF, you’re not truly learning Japanese. Japanese without kanji, hiragana, or katakana simply isn’t Japanese.
This over-the-top marketing even extends to the lesson titles, which almost always include the word “Japan.” And if they can’t find a way to fit it in naturally, they just add “in Japan” at the end — as if that somehow makes the lesson more authentic. It’s as if the whole thing was written by someone obsessed with sounding “Japan-loving.” Let’s see how far that exaggerated enthusiasm can sell.
Not suiting to audiobook format
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