Effectiveness
7.1
User experience
8.4
Features
9.3
Value for money
9
Read Rosetta Stone review
$7.99per month
Effectiveness
5.3
User experience
9
Features
7.8
Value for money
9
Read Drops review
$7.50per month
VS

Rosetta Stone vs Drops

Overview

Rosetta Stone is one of the oldest and most tried and tested solutions for language learning. It immerses you in interactive core lessons conducted entirely in the target language and provides speech technology to get you speaking in your chosen language quickly and correctly. Rosetta Stone lets you choose both your level and your reasons for pursuing a language and if you purchase Lifetime Plus, you can access regular small group lessons with a live tutor.

Drops is a slick, game based vocabulary app. It introduces new words and phrases with audio recordings and images and then helps you commit them to memory through game play. Games involve matching, sorting and true/false challenges. Drops also lets you track your progress, provides extra practice for words you’re struggling with and earn badges for various achievements.

Pros
  • Very immersive, you see, hear and read only in your target language in true to life scenarios
  • Speech technology to fine tune your accent and object recognition which allows you to point at an object with your phone camera to identify it and have a conversation about it in your target language
  • Allows you to personalize your language goals
  • Provides In depth progress reports
  • Flexible - available in desktop and device versions
  • Regular small group lessons with live tutors for Lifetime Plus subscribers
  • Good user experience
  • Effective at teaching vocabulary in a fun way that really sticks
  • Clean and easy to navigate interface
  • Review activities including Review Quiz and Review dojo
  • Adaptable with ability to skip learned content
  • Wide range of topics covered
Cons
  • Can feel rather repetitive
  • Not great for grammar, writing or cultural context
  • No placement test
  • Full immersion in the target language may be off putting for some
  • Free version has a daily 5 minute limit
  • Does not teach sentences or grammar - but does have a travel talk category for phrases
  • No voice recognition software for pronunciation practice
  • Desktop version can be a little glitchy
Best for

Best for: Those looking to learn a new language from scratch or seeking to improve their speaking and pronunciation. Most suitable for those happy to learn purely in the target language and to learn intuitively rather than in a structured analytical way.

Best for: Those who want to learn another language from scratch and would like a head start by mastering some basic vocabulary. Also anyone who wants to supplement another more comprehensive method of learning with a reliable and effective vocabulary app. Especially suitable for people who learn through game play

Price

From $7.99 per month

From $7.50 per month

Number of users

500,000 active users

40 million downloads

Overall

Overall: Rosetta Stone propels your language-learning forward by adapting a program of courses to suit your learning aims. It immerses you in the target language (combined with visual and audio clues) so you can learn instinctively and without relying on translations. It also stands out by offering additional features such as voice and object recognition.

To provider

Overall: Drops is great at what it claims to do. That is, teach vocabulary through game play in short daily sessions. It’s upfront about not teaching grammar and sentences and as long as you understand what it is and isn’t for, it represents good value. The free version gives you a good feel for what the app is like so you have nothing to lose by trying it out.

To provider
Supported languages

Spanish, French, German, Italian, English, Japanese, Arabic, Chinese, Dutch, Filipino, English (US), Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Irish, Korean, Persian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish (Latin America), Swedish, Turkish, Vietnamese

Ainu, Arabic, ASL, Bosnian, Chinese (Cantonese and Mandarin), Croatian, Danish, Dutch, English (American and British), Esperanto, Estonian, Finnish, French, Galician, German, Greek, Hawaiian, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Icelandic, Igbo, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Persian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazilian and European), Romanian, Russian, Samoan, Sanskrit, Serbian, Spanish (Castilan and Mexican), Swahili, Swedish, Tagalog, Te Reo Maori, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese and Yoruba.

About

Rosetta Stone is a language e-learning service founded in 1992 with the aim of unlocking the secrets of language learning success. This is why it was named after the actual Rosetta Stone (which unlocked the secrets of Egyptian hieroglyphics).

It's now one of the oldest and best known names in the industry with 500k+ active subscribers.

As well as having platforms designed for personal and business use, Rosetta Stone has a K-12 educational platform. Around 15% of schools in the US subscribe to one of Rosetta Stone's products.

Rosetta Stone is very immersive and uses only the target language (combined with audio, images and speech recognition) to teach you from the very start.

Drops was founded in Estonia in 2015 by Daniel Farkas and Mark Szulyovszky. Its mission was to make a game out of language learning. And it paid off.

By 2020 it had 25 million users and that number has now exceeded the 40 million mark.

Drops is now the fastest growing language app in the world and adds around seven languages a year to its offering. It spans mobile and web-based programs.

Though Drops does use gamification, its designers insist it is a gaming, not just a gamified, app. The difference being that gamification uses rewards to give you external motivation. Whereas being immersed in a game is an internally rewarding experience.

And though it’s fun, years of research have gone into what makes language learning effective and easy.

In November 2020, Drops was acquired by Kahoot!, the world's leading game-based learning platform. Testimony both to the fun and effectiveness of the Drops’ game based approach.

As part of Kahoot!, Drops continues to evolve and find more enjoyable and effective ways to learn new languages. It now has two companion apps: Scripts, which teaches learners how to read and write new alphabet/character-based writing systems, and Droplets, for children.

Drops also has a commitment to protecting culturally endangered languages, such as Hawaiian, Samoan, and Maori and they have worked with UNESCO to support this aim.

How it works

To get started on Rosetta Stone you choose the language you want to learn and either go for a three day free trial or subscribe to one of the options (see costs below).

Following this, you choose your proficiency level and your learning aim (travel, work, etc.). Rosetta Stone will then present you with a learning plan based on your answers:

These plans are the core part of the program. The overall aim is to teach you useful vocabulary and phrases that match your learning aims.

Each lesson is split into bite-sized parts which challenge you in different ways and help to keep up your engagement.

Rosetta Stone also offers a range of supporting features such as:

  • Speech recognition to hone pronounciation
  • Seek and speak (object recognition)
  • Phrasebooks
  • Stories
  • On demand videos
  • Live tuition with expert coaches and native speakers (for Lifetime Plus subscribers)

All of these are described in detail in the features section below.

To provider

Drops is a games based app designed to make language learning a fun part of your daily routine.

You download the app by pointing your phone camera at the QR code, or by using Google Play or the Apple app store, or from your desktop. Then you can use it for free for a limit of 5 minutes a day or subscribe to Premium with a free 7 day trial.

Once you’ve downloaded Drops, you just choose the language you want to learn.

Then you adapt Drops to your needs by answering questions about your goals for learning, your age, your existing knowledge, when and for how long you want to spend learning each day and your personal interests. Drops then designs a program based on your responses. You can change language any time after you’ve started your learning.

Sessions are around 5 minutes long. Each one introduces words from a topic relevant to your interests and reasons for learning. The words will be spoken and written out with a matching visual and you’ll play various games to help you memorize them. You can indicate which words you feel you’ve mastered so the app won’t test you on them as often.

During your session you will be given point scores and encouragement to keep you motivated and, at the end, a summary of your progress so far. If you’re in free mode, you’ll need to wait 10 hours before you can take another session.

To provider
What a lesson is like

Generally, whatever the level or language, Rosetta Stone’s lessons are structured in a similar way.

They are grouped around communication topics depending on your purpose for learning (eg: business, travel, etc.) and designed to teach useful vocabulary and phrases which you then practise.

Lessons themselves are split into bite sized exercises conducted entirely in the target language.

You’ll usually hear and see a word or phrase along with a number of pictures and try to match them together. The aim is to get you learning actively and intuitively, rather than just memorizing words and translations. You’ll also be asked to repeat words and phrases using voice recognition.

Lessons consist of introducing new words and phrases using audio and a matching image.

After 3 or 4 new words or phrases have been introduced, you play a variety of games delivered in quick succession requiring you to:

  • Carry out different sorts of matching activities
  • Spell out words and phrases by selecting letters or combinations of letters
  • Indicating whether what the app is displaying is correct or incorrect

    Words you already know will be repeated and revisited to help commit them to long term memory. You can choose which words you feel you don’t have to review, and the app won’t test you on them as frequently.

There are also a number of review tools such as quiz mode that you can engage with to strengthen your knowledge.

Lessons last 5 minutes and there is a countdown to keep you motivated and engaged.

Who is it good for?

Rosetta Stone's learning style would suit anyone who's:

  • Learning a new language from scratch
  • Keen to improve their skills in another language
  • Happy to learn purely in the target language
  • Like to learn intuitively rather than in an analytical way
  • Appreciative of consistent, predictable content
  • Interested in applying language-learning to real-life scenarios
  • Keen to join regular small group live tutorials
  • Needing to learn flexibly on any device

Bearing in mind that Drops is a vocabulary learning app, I would say it would suit anyone who:

  • Wants to learn another language from scratch and would like a head start by mastering some basic vocabulary
  • Wants to supplement another more comprehensive method of learning with a reliable and effective vocabulary app
  • Enjoys learning through game play
Features
  • Personalized learning
  • Flexible learning
  • Speech recognition
  • Seek and Speak - object recognition
  • Phrasebooks and stories
  • Regular live small group classes led by a tutor
  • 45 Languages
  • Review tools
  • Game based approach
  • Gamification and challenges
  • Supplementary Apps
Is it worth it?

A lot depends on the type of learner you are.

If you like to work things out for yourself and are happy to plunge right into your chosen language then Rosetta Stone's dynamic immersive approach is likely to suit you well.

It will teach you the vocabulary and phrases you need to achieve your language learning goals. And though its core lessons can feel a little repetitive, Rosetta Stone gives you the freedom to jump ahead or focus on the specifics that interest you. It also provides lots of fun resources to help you actively practice the language.

And if you subscribe to Lifetime Plus you'll be able to boost your learning real time feedback with live tutorials from expert native speaking coaches.

But if you are a very analytical person who wants to understand the grammatical structure of a language, or you want a strong focus on writing, it may not be the best choice for you.

While I'm nowhere near proficient in speaking French, after a few hours on Rosetta Stone I was speaking more confidently and precisely than before. Also, the additional features such as seek and speak, stories and videos were a great way of immersing myself in the language outside of core lessons.

Overall, with a free trial option for three days, I think Rosetta Stone is worth trying out. After choosing your goals, you can get a feel for the site by taking a few lessons. As most users agree, it's a helpful place to start and gets you speaking actively in your new language.

If you’re looking to learn a ton of vocabulary in a super fun way that really sticks then yes.

I found the app to be very compelling, it really holds your attention. I really enjoyed all the games and found I was learning tons without even noticing. And it’s not just fun, but visually appealing with a clean, easy to use interface.

But if you’re looking to learn a language in the round, with sentences, conversation, spoken exercises and cultural sensitivity, Drops is not for you.

I would say Drops is best for someone wanting to get into pole position in a new language by learning key vocab. Or those needing a fast and fun recap in a language prior to travel. It would also sit well alongside another more comprehensive language learning resource.

That said, the freemium version is available to you for five minutes a day. And if you love it, you can trial the app for 7 days before commiting to a subscription. So there’s nothing to lose by giving it a try.