Independent software studio publishing multilingual learning apps, practical tools, and family-friendly games.
AnMoon's educational catalog is built around two simple app families: First Words and Memory Cards. Instead of releasing unrelated learning titles with different structures, we chose two familiar formats that can be adapted across several languages. That makes the catalog easier for families to understand and easier for children to revisit without learning a completely new interface each time.
The four languages currently represented in the catalog are English, French, Arabic, and Tamazight/Tifinagh. Those choices reflect both practical learning needs and a longer-term interest in offering approachable tools for languages that are often underserved in children's software. The original releases were previously available on the Apple App Store, and while they are not currently available there anymore, work is ongoing to bring the educational lineup back on Android and Google Play.
The First Words series is meant for early vocabulary exposure and alphabet familiarity. The structure stays intentionally simple: recognizable categories, short words, and visual cues that help children connect sounds, letters, and objects without getting lost in menus or game mechanics. These apps work best for young learners, bilingual households, and adults who want to guide a child through short repeatable learning sessions.
The Memory Cards series uses matching play to reinforce attention, recall, and word recognition. Matching games are familiar enough that children can understand the task quickly, which leaves more room for repetition and language exposure. That makes them useful both as simple games and as light vocabulary practice.
English and French are common educational priorities for many families, while Arabic is central for a large number of early learners in the region. Tamazight and Tifinagh matter for a different reason: educational resources remain more limited, and approachable mobile tools can help make early exposure feel more accessible. Including all four languages gives the catalog a clearer identity than a generic set of children's apps.
The goal is not to replace formal teaching. These apps are better understood as low-friction support tools: useful for short practice moments, shared family time, and gentle introduction to words, letters, and recognition skills.
Parents can use them for short guided sessions at home. Teachers and tutors can use them as a simple supplement when a child benefits from repetition and visual reinforcement. Families in bilingual or multilingual settings may also find them useful as a lightweight bridge between everyday language exposure and more structured learning.
If you want to browse the full list of titles, including each language version and the current availability note, visit the Educational Apps page.