Speaking practice
Practice English with random voice chat
Random voice chat can be useful for low-pressure English speaking practice when you treat each call as a short conversation exercise.
Keep the goal small
Instead of trying to have a perfect conversation, pick one small goal: introduce yourself generally, ask three questions, explain your day, or practice listening without translating every word.
Short random calls are useful because they repeat the hardest part of speaking practice: starting a conversation with someone new.
Use safe topics
Talk about music, food, hobbies, books, movies, or general city/country context. Avoid exact addresses, private accounts, full names, work details, and anything sensitive.
- What are you listening to lately?
- What is a normal day like for you?
- What food should someone try where you live?
- What topic do you like talking about?
Leave normally
Every call will not be a good match. Leave politely or rematch quickly when the conversation is uncomfortable, too fast, or not useful for practice.
FAQ
Can random voice chat help with English speaking?
It can help with confidence and spontaneous listening/speaking practice, as long as you keep expectations realistic.
Should I tell strangers personal information while practicing?
No. Practice with general topics and avoid private identifiers or contact details.
What if I do not understand the other person?
Ask them to repeat or slow down. If the call is not useful, leave and try another match.