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fabianruiz April 11, 2007
Lisa April 2, 2007
I too like your stories rdg. This is a good game but it's a bit too busy in my taste. I think it's the blurry drawing in the middle that does it. Can't you change that because the game itself is really good.
equestenebrarum April 1, 2007
I like it that you always have some storys to tell to your games. It's like an extra bonus :-D
RonaldDerGrosse March 31, 2007
In America first year courses usually start with 101 and work up. In Austria 101 could have stood for the 101 schilling stamp that you had to buy for your Meldungsbuch or the 101 signatures that you got before and after the course to make your Meldungsbuch official. I still keep this treasure as a keepsake along with my student Ausweise (that got me in every Jugendherrberg from Spain to Norway for fifty cents a night and a free pass in any museum or place of antiquity. For German Teacher I used the English so others might take notice and not pass when they saw the German.
equestenebrarum March 31, 2007
I forgot to ask: What does the 101 stand for?
equestenebrarum March 31, 2007
Nice one!
My German Teacher is loosely translated, more accurate would be "Mein Deutschlehrer". Otherwise splendid!
RonaldDerGrosse March 31, 2007
The only artist that I could get at the time was a kid in the class by the name of "Frankenstein". He grew up to be a doctor and never could get the thumb in the right place! We can remove the e on Stirn but the "haben sie" is pre made and would require the whole thing to be remade. The "der, die, das, du, ihr, sie, Sie, auf, zu, singulars and plurals, case changes and verb at the end of the sentence : macht Deutsch schwierig für Aüslander zu lernen. I have always admired the German babies who get this stuff right in five years! Imagine what it is like to be in America comprehending "y'all come" in Kentucky!
niklas March 31, 2007
Isn't the thumb on the other side of the hand?
Good game otherwise, a refreshening of my german skills is always welcome.
francis1 March 31, 2007
Die Stirne has to be die Stirn, Haben Sie has to be sie haben (you have to start sie with the lower case letter s if you are talking about more than one person (they). Sie starting with the uppercase letter S is the polite version of you. (Word order in this case: sie haben - they have, haben sie? - have they?)
The drawing on the board is rather blurred and everything but pampering the eye.
Nontheless I want to give credit were credit is due, and this is a very good game for learners, like all of Ronald's that I have seen so far :-)
| Highscores - German Class 101 | Place 1 - 10 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Player Name | Score | Time | Date of Play | |
| 1 | livefreeordie | 100% | 1:20.8 min. | 2008-04-07 |
| 2 | Beltenebros | 100% | 1:40.1 min. | 2007-07-13 |
| 3 | cmrss | 100% | 1:43.3 min. | 2007-11-02 |
| 4 | emili | 100% | 1:43.6 min. | 2008-04-25 |
| 5 | mgazso | 100% | 1:51.5 min. | 2007-09-07 |
| 6 | subfusion | 100% | 1:52.4 min. | 2007-08-27 |
| 7 | TheLemon | 100% | 2:13.7 min. | 2008-06-19 |
| 8 | kcoutlaw | 96% | 2:18.1 min. | 2008-03-17 |
| 9 | cherry-flavor | 96% | 3:05.1 min. | 2008-05-19 |
| 10 | tonyjr | 96% | 7:25.4 min. | 2008-04-30 |
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Anonymous, 1 week ago
Anonymous, 1 week, 5 days ago
Anonymous, 2 weeks ago
Nice game... But i think you should change the category... Maybe Linguistics