Gorgo is a language tool. It teaches French through impossible scenes.
Each scene lives inside a room. Each room is part of a palace. Each palace contains a small civilization of objects, weather, characters, and an unusual amount of fruit, all of which hold a wingle word in place.
Friends made of salami. Sun umbrellas that are large berets.
Gorgo is an experiment:
Can memory techniques work for language learning at scale? We think so—and we’re looking for 100 collaborators to find out.
Not customers. Explorers. People curious enough to see if learning can feel like dreaming—and still work better than anything else.
Language as architecture. Memory as art.
You don’t repeat words until they stick—you place them in vivid, strange little worlds that do the remembering for you.
When you revisit a palace, the words come back naturally. Gorgo is what happens when design, art, and science meet.
Not gamified learning—just beautiful recall.
FAQ
Q: What is Gorgo?
A surreal language-learning experiment built on memory palaces, art, and science.
Q: How does it work?
It teaches the 1,000 most-used words in context—through strange, vivid phrases anchored in visual scenes you’ll never forget.
Who is it for?
Visual thinkers, neurodivergent learners, artists, and anyone who’s failed with repetition but remembers dreams.
We’re starting with French. Spanish and German next.