Fluency Doesn't Happen with a Screen. It Happens with FRIENDS.
Give your child a squad of "Swahili Besties" to play Monopoly, Taboo, and Pictionary with every month. When language learning becomes social play, everything changes.
Your child is learning the words. They're watching the videos. They're making progress. But here's the question that keeps you up at night: Who are they actually talking to?
If they only practise Swahili with you or Grandma, something subtle but powerful happens. The language becomes a "secret code" that feels disconnected from their real world. They start to wonder: Am I the only kid who speaks this?
Without peers to connect with, Swahili can feel isolating rather than empowering. Your child needs to see that cool kids just like them—kids who love football, video games, and silly jokes—speak Swahili too. That's when the magic happens.
Language becomes something they want to use, not just something they have to learn.
Introducing the "Vipaji" Game Club Annual Pass
We don't do boring classes. We do Game Nights. Every month, our expert teachers host live, high-energy virtual game sessions where we play the world's most popular board games—entirely in Swahili.
Think of it as a playdate with purpose. Your child joins a consistent group of diaspora kids their age, builds friendships across continents, and practises Swahili without even realising they're learning. They're too busy laughing, strategising, and trying to win!
🎲 Swahili Monopoly
They learn numbers and negotiation by buying hotels and paying rent—all in Swahili. "Ninanunua nyumba mbili!" (I'm buying two houses!)
🤫 Swahili Sema (Taboo)
Can they describe "Soka" (football) without saying "mpira" (ball)? This game forces their brain to think fast and creatively in Swahili.
🎨 Pictionary & Charades
Using abilities vocabulary like "unaweza kuendesha baiskeli?" (Can you ride a bike?), they draw and act out clues for their teammates.
Why Your Child Needs This Squad
Peer Pressure (The Good Kind)
When they see other diaspora kids speaking confidently and having fun, something clicks. They don't want to be left behind—they want to keep up, jump in, and be part of the conversation.
Suddenly, speaking Swahili isn't "Mum's thing" anymore. It's their thing.
A Safe Space to Make Mistakes
It's completely okay to stumble over words when you're laughing over a game of Ludo. There's no pressure, no judgement—just kids being kids, making mistakes, and learning together.
This is where real fluency is built: in the messy, joyful middle of play.
Built-In Consistency
Life is busy. Between homework, football practice, and family commitments, it's hard to create consistent language practice. The Game Club gives you a guaranteed monthly session—no planning required.
Bonus: It's your Date Night! Whilst we entertain and educate your child for 90 minutes, you can finally relax.
This isn't just language practice. It's community building. It's confidence building. It's giving your child a tribe of friends who share their cultural identity and celebrate it together.
The "Founding Member" Offer
Here's the Standard Deal
Normally, the Vipaji Game Club costs $49 per month ($588 per year). That's incredible value for live, expert-led sessions where your child builds fluency and friendships.
But because you've invested in the Full System today, we want to welcome you into the inner circle with something special.
Your Exclusive Upgrade
Get a Full 1-Year Annual Pass for just $197.
That breaks down to just $16 per month—less than one piano lesson, one trip to the cinema, or one takeaway meal. For an entire year of community, confidence, and conversational fluency.
$391
Instant Savings
You save more than half the regular annual price
12
Live Sessions
One high-energy game night every single month
$16
Monthly Cost
Less than a family trip to the cinema
Founding Member Bonus: Lock in this price forever. Even when we raise rates next year, your renewal stays at $197. That's our promise to early supporters like you.
Give Your Child the Gift of a Swahili-Speaking Squad
Imagine this: Next month, your child logs in for their first Game Club session. They're a bit nervous at first, but within minutes, they're laughing with kids from London, Nairobi, and New York. They're all speaking Swahili, playing together, and having the time of their lives.
After the session ends, your child bounds into the kitchen with a huge smile: "Mum, we won! And I made a new friend called Amani—she's so funny!"
That's the moment when Swahili stops being a lesson and becomes a lifestyle. A source of joy, connection, and pride.
This is your chance to give your child not just language skills, but a community. A squad of Swahili besties who will cheer them on, challenge them, and grow with them.