Microprocessing

Duolingo Needs to Chill

Enough with the passive-aggressive notifications, Duo

Angela Lashbrook
Debugger
Published in
6 min readDec 3, 2020

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Closeup of the green owl icon of Duolingo.
Image courtesy of Duolingo.

A few months before I went on a much-needed vacation to Mexico City in 2018, I tried Duolingo, the ubiquitous language-learning app, to gently push my Spanish skills into something resembling respectability. But I generally dislike phone games, which meant I didn’t love the app, which gamifies language education through exercises and achievements. I fell off, as many of us fledgling second-language learners do.

Duolingo did not take it well. After ignoring the app’s rude emails (“Learning Spanish requires daily practice. Practice now?” “We haven’t seen you in a while.” “Keep Duo happy!”) and failing to log into the game for about a month, the app sent me one last, passive-aggressive-as-hell notification.

“These reminders don’t seem to be working. We’ll stop sending them for now.”

Well, jeez. I made that little green owl cry. I failed at making myself into a more educated citizen and traveler and didn’t even respond to Duo the Multilingual Owl’s attempts to get me back in the game. It legitimately made me feel kind of…

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Angela Lashbrook
Debugger

I’m a columnist for OneZero, where I write about the intersection of health & tech. Also seen at Elemental, The Atlantic, VICE, and Vox. Brooklyn, NY.