Help test Polidict for Android
Last updated: May 29, 2026
Polidict for Android is now in closed testing on Google Play, and we are looking for testers.
If you use Android and want a serious vocabulary-learning app with sync, groups, trainings, speaking, listening, and offline support, this is a good moment to try it before the public release.
After you join the test, install Polidict from Google Play:

Polidict for Android vocabulary screen with saved words

Polidict for Android training modes screen
What we need from testers
The main goal is simple: install the app, use it as a real learning tool, and tell us what does not work well.
Useful feedback includes:
installation or Google Play opt-in problems;
sign-in issues;
crashes, freezes, or screens that get stuck;
bugs in vocabulary, groups, collections, or training sessions;
problems with speaking, listening, microphone access, or audio playback;
offline behavior that feels confusing or unreliable;
Android-specific UI issues, especially on different screen sizes.
Short, concrete reports are the most helpful. A message like “Speaking training crashes after I tap Start on Pixel 7, Android 15” is better than a general “the app is broken.”
How to join
Open the Google Play testing link.
Join the closed test with the Google account you use on your Android device.
Open the Polidict Play Store listing.
Install the app and sign in or start in guest mode.
Try adding words, importing collections, and running a few trainings.
If Google Play does not let you install the app immediately after joining, wait a few minutes and reopen the listing from the same Google account.
What to try first
If you already use Polidict on the web or iPhone, sign in with the same account and check that your vocabulary, groups, and progress appear correctly.
If you are new to Polidict, start with this flow:
Choose your study language and native language.
Add a few words or import a ready-made collection.
Run a mixed training session.
Try one audio-based mode: speaking or listening.
Turn on airplane mode and check whether the app remains useful offline.
That path covers the parts of the Android app where real-device feedback matters most.
Why Android feedback matters
Android devices vary much more than iPhones: screen sizes, microphone behavior, audio routing, manufacturer settings, battery restrictions, and OS versions can all affect the learning experience.
The app can pass internal checks and still behave differently on a real Samsung, Pixel, Xiaomi, OnePlus, or other Android device. Closed testing helps us find those issues before opening the app more broadly.
Send feedback
Send feedback to support@polidict.com.
When reporting a bug, please include:
your device model;
Android version;
what you were trying to do;
what happened instead;
whether the issue happens every time or only sometimes.
You can also include screenshots or screen recordings if they make the issue easier to understand.
If you want to see what is already planned, check the Polidict roadmap. And if you want a deeper look at the mobile learning flow, read the Polidict iPhone app overview; the Android app follows the same core product direction, adapted for Android.