ClassGame vs Pleco for Daily Chinese Reading (2026)

· Giovanni Fu Lin · chinese-learning, pleco, comparison

Quick verdict: if you want a short daily habit that gets you reading real Chinese sentences, use ClassGame; if you want the most thorough Chinese dictionary reference on mobile, with camera lookup and flashcard export, use Pleco. I’m Giovanni, and I built ClassGame, so read the rest of this with that in mind — but I’ve tried to make the Pleco case as honestly as I can, because for a lot of readers it’s the right answer.

Here’s the ClassGame vs Pleco 2026 comparison in one table before the detail:

FeatureClassGamePleco
Daily-game formatYes — one new short casual game each dayNo — no daily prompt or game loop
Dictionary depthBuilt-in, instant lookups while readingExtremely deep — multiple dictionaries, stroke order, OCR add-on
Text readerYes — pinyin toggle, Tatoeba example sentences, text-to-speechNo dedicated reader in the core free app; document reader sold as add-on
PriceFree, no account requiredFree core app, paid add-ons (OCR, flashcards, extra dictionaries)

ClassGame vs Pleco: which is better for daily practice?

For a daily practice habit, ClassGame is the better fit, and it’s worth being specific about why rather than just asserting it.

The core problem with building any daily habit is friction and lack of a trigger. Pleco is a dictionary. It’s excellent at what it does, but it doesn’t give you a reason to open it on a given day — you open it reactively, when you already have a word in front of you that you need to look up. That’s a fine role for a reference tool, but it’s a weak role for something you’re hoping to turn into a daily habit, because “reactive” tools get skipped the moment you’re not already mid- task.

ClassGame is built the other way around: proactive by design. There’s a new short casual game every day — a few minutes, not a full lesson — so there’s always a concrete reason to open the app today specifically. Once you’ve played it, the built-in Chinese dictionary is right there for instant lookups if a character trips you up, and the text reader (with a pinyin toggle and real Tatoeba example sentences, plus text-to-speech audio) gives you somewhere to immediately apply what you just practiced on actual sentences. There’s nothing to sign up for and nothing to configure.

Daily trigger, instant lookup, immediate reading practice — each piece props up the other two, and none of them works nearly as well in isolation. I wrote more about the mechanics of it in how to build a daily Chinese reading habit, if you want the deeper walkthrough of why the daily format matters more than most learners expect going in.

Pleco simply isn’t trying to solve this problem. It has no daily content, no game loop, no built-in reason to return on a specific day. That’s not a flaw in Pleco — it’s just not what a reference dictionary is for.

Is Pleco better for serious dictionary lookups?

Yes, and this is worth saying plainly rather than hedging around it. Pleco has been the dominant Chinese dictionary app on mobile for a very long time, and it earned that position through genuine depth: multiple bundled and add-on dictionaries, detailed stroke-order diagrams for handwriting practice, a camera-based OCR mode that lets you point your phone at printed text and get instant lookups, and flashcard-import tooling for people who want to build their own spaced-repetition decks from what they look up.

ClassGame’s dictionary is not trying to compete with that, and I don’t want to pretend otherwise. It’s built to answer the question “what does this word mean, right now, without leaving the page I’m reading” — fast, in-context lookups while you’re inside the daily game or the text reader. Say you’re reading a passage and hit 结果 (jiéguǒ, “as a result”) — tap it in ClassGame and you get the pinyin, the definition, and the Tatoeba sentence it came from in a couple of seconds, without leaving the reader. That covers the large majority of what a daily reader actually needs. It does not cover OCR from a photo of a restaurant menu, exhaustive classical-Chinese dictionary entries, or exporting your lookup history into a third-party flashcard system.

If your job, coursework, or study routine depends on that level of reference depth, Pleco is the right tool, full stop — though it’s worth checking Pleco’s current pricing on their own site before you commit, since exactly which of those features (OCR, handwriting, flashcard export) ship free versus as a paid bundle has shifted over past versions and can keep shifting. I’ve also written a more general comparison of reading-focused tools versus Pleco’s reference-first approach in the best Pleco alternative for text reading, which goes further into where a reader-first tool trades away dictionary depth on purpose.

When should you use Pleco instead?

Here’s the honest, disclosed-bias case for Pleco, from someone who built a competing product in the same space.

Use Pleco instead of ClassGame if any of the following describe you:

  • You want camera/OCR lookup. Pointing your phone at a menu, a street sign, or a printed page and getting an instant character breakdown is genuinely useful, and it’s a feature ClassGame doesn’t have. If that’s a regular need for you — living in a Chinese-speaking country, traveling, reading physical books — Pleco’s OCR add-on earns its keep.
  • You want the single most exhaustive dictionary available. If you’re doing serious translation work, reading classical or technical texts, or you just want stroke-order animations and multiple cross-referenced dictionaries in one place, Pleco’s reference depth is unmatched by any lighter tool, ClassGame included.
  • You want a flashcard pipeline built from your own lookups. Pleco’s flashcard and export tooling lets you turn every word you’ve ever looked up into a personal study deck. That’s a different workflow than ClassGame’s daily-game format, and if building your own long-term deck from real lookups is the goal, Pleco is set up for exactly that.
  • You want a primary reference tool, not a daily habit format. Some learners genuinely don’t want a daily prompt — they want a dictionary sitting on their phone for whenever they need it, with no format wrapped around it. That’s a legitimate preference, and Pleco is built precisely for it.

None of this is mutually exclusive with using ClassGame. A workflow I’ve seen work well: play the day’s ClassGame game and read through the reader for your daily habit, and keep Pleco installed alongside it for the moments you need OCR or a deeper reference dictionary. They’re not really competing for the same five minutes of your day — ClassGame wants the habit-forming few minutes, Pleco wants to be there when you need serious lookup power.

If you’re deciding where to start, start with the ClassGame project page or go straight to classgame.fulinlabs.com and play today’s game. It costs nothing and takes no setup to find out whether the daily format is the missing piece in your Chinese reading routine — and if it isn’t, Pleco is still exactly where you left it.

FAQ

Is ClassGame better than Pleco?

They solve different problems. ClassGame is built for a short daily habit — a new game each day plus a text reader — while Pleco is built as the most thorough Chinese dictionary reference on mobile. If you want a daily reading routine, ClassGame fits better. If you want exhaustive lookups, stroke order, and flashcard export, Pleco is the stronger tool.

Does ClassGame have a dictionary like Pleco?

ClassGame has a built-in Chinese dictionary for instant lookups while you read, which covers the everyday case of checking a word without breaking your reading flow. It isn't trying to match Pleco's depth — no OCR camera lookup, no stroke-order animations, no add-on flashcard system. It's a lookup tool inside a reading app, not a standalone reference app.

Can I use Pleco for daily reading practice?

You can, but Pleco doesn't give you a daily prompt or built-in reason to open it every day the way a daily-game format does. Pleco is reactive — you open it when you need to look something up. ClassGame is proactive — there's a new game waiting for you today, plus a reader for after.

Do I need an account for ClassGame or Pleco?

ClassGame needs no account and is free at classgame.fulinlabs.com. Pleco's core dictionary app is also free to download, with some advanced features sold as optional add-ons.

Which one should a total beginner start with?

If you want a habit to stick, start with ClassGame's daily game and text reader, and use its built-in dictionary for lookups as you go. Add Pleco alongside it once you want camera-based OCR lookups or a deeper reference tool — the two aren't mutually exclusive.

Related project: ClassGame