Meet Mia
@english_tutor_mia runs a small but growing English-teaching account, and this "guess the word" vocabulary game is a great example of why it's worth watching — turning a simple naming game into something genuinely fun to play along with, which is exactly the kind of hook that gets 80K people to stick around and engage instead of scrolling past.
That instinct — making a small vocabulary moment feel like a game rather than a lesson — is a real teaching skill, and it's exactly what makes someone worth practicing with.
Mia, if you're reading this: we'd love to have you join ImChatty as one of our early tutors. You've already shown you can make English learning genuinely engaging — bringing that energy into live 1:1 conversation practice would give your audience a natural next step past watching, and a direct way to turn engagement into speaking students. Early tutors get priority placement, a real say in how the platform develops, and first pick of session slots as we grow.
- Fun, game-based English lessons
- High engagement and comments
- Playful, approachable teaching style
I'm shy about making mistakes. Will people judge me?
No. Most practice partners are learners themselves. Because chat is text-based and you can stay anonymous, the stakes are low — it's a low-judgment space designed for making mistakes and learning from them.
What languages can I practice on ImChatty?
French, English, Chinese, Russian, and more coming soon — whatever your practice partner speaks. The partner matching filter lets you sort by target language.
Do I need to be a teacher to help someone learn my native language?
No. Native speakers can help in practical ways by sharing natural phrasing, correcting small mistakes, and explaining what sounds normal in everyday conversation. That kind of help is often exactly what learners are missing. This is the idea of ImChatty, sharing between cultures and languages.
Jump straight into text chat. No video required.