A1–B1 plurals nouns articles grammar
Plural Planes
Land the right plural ending before the plane crashes.
German has five plural classes — -e, -en/n, -er, -s, and a zero/umlaut-only pattern — and no reliable rule predicts which a given noun takes. Plural Planes shows you a singular noun with its article (das Kind) and a few possible endings, and you pick the one that finishes the plural before your plane crashes into the wall. The correct full plural is revealed after every round, so you learn even when you guess wrong.
Plural endings stick through high-repetition exposure under mild time pressure, not through rule memorisation. The shrinking time window forces commitment instead of analysis, and seeing the correct die Kinder revealed after every attempt — right or wrong — burns the right form into memory. Wrong-answer buttons are always real plural endings, never invented forms, so you're never exposed to incorrect German. The same words recycle across sessions until each plural feels automatic.
A singular noun with its article appears at the top (e.g. das Kind). A few buttons below show possible plural endings — like -en/n, -e, -er, -s, or ⊘ (zero ending). Your plane is rolling toward a wall and you have a few seconds to tap the right ending. Correct = the plane takes off and the full plural (die Kinder, with English translation) is revealed. Wrong or too slow = the plane crashes, and the correct plural is still revealed so you learn from the miss.
There are five patterns: -e (der Hund → die Hunde), -en/n (die Frau → die Frauen), -er often with umlaut (das Kind → die Kinder, das Haus → die Häuser), -s mostly for loanwords (das Auto → die Autos), and zero ending sometimes with umlaut only (der Apfel → die Äpfel). Plural Planes cycles you through all five, with the article die shown on every button — because every German plural takes die regardless of the singular gender.
German plurals don't follow a single rule, so memorising rules is a dead end. What works is high-volume exposure to real plural forms until your brain learns the patterns by feel. A few minutes a day in this game gives you more reps than a week of textbook exercises, and the same nouns recycle across sessions so each plural sticks through repeated encounters.
Because German plurals often involve internal umlaut changes (Haus → Häuser, Mutter → Mütter), not just an ending tacked on. Showing you a clean stem would imply a false simplicity — that you only need to pick the ending. The scribble forces you to recall the full plural mentally, then the reveal at the end of each round confirms whether your mental form matched.
No. The wrong-answer buttons are always real plural endings used by other German nouns — never fabricated forms. So even when you pick wrong, you're never exposed to incorrect German. For zero-ending nouns, endings that match the word's own final letters are also excluded, since they'd be visually misleading.
The free game gives you a strong core of high-frequency concrete nouns. Pro unlocks a much larger set — including more tricky umlaut plurals and less common patterns — so you keep meeting new words instead of looping the same ones. All words are concrete, countable nouns; abstract and uncountable nouns are excluded since their plurals aren't used in real conversation.
A few help: most feminine nouns add -n or -en (die Frau → die Frauen). Most masculine and neuter nouns ending in -er, -en, -el stay the same in the plural, sometimes with an umlaut (der Apfel → die Äpfel). Loanwords usually take -s (das Hotel → die Hotels). But these rules cover roughly 60% of cases — the rest you absorb through reps, which is exactly what Plural Planes delivers.
A short daily session of focused reps beats long weekly cramming. Aim for a few minutes a day, several days a week — that's the sweet spot for building durable pattern recognition without burning out.