The Noticing Game is a beginner immersion technique for when you can't understand much of what's happening in the target language. Instead of trying to understand, your goal is simply to notice things: words you recognize, sounds that repeat, patterns that stand out.
That's it. No pausing, no looking things up, no stress about understanding.
As a beginner, trying to understand content in a language you barely know is frustrating and demotivating. The Noticing Game reframes the task: instead of feeling like you're failing to understand, you're succeeding at finding things. This keeps you engaged with the language and gives your brain meaningful practice processing it.
It also strengthens the connection between what you study (priming) and what you encounter in real content (immersion). When you notice a word you studied, your brain reinforces that knowledge.
Once the basic Noticing Game feels easy, try the Noticing Game with Confirmation: when you notice something, pause and try to remember what it means. Then check with a dictionary or tool. This is a step toward interactive immersion — you're starting to decode the language, not just notice it.
The Noticing Game is most useful in Phases 1A-1C, when your vocabulary is still too small for meaningful comprehension. As your vocabulary grows and you start understanding more, you'll naturally transition to Interactive Reading with Audio.