Every app that ever tried to compete with TikTok lost. Facebook copied it (Reels), YouTube copied it (Shorts), Snapchat copied it (Spotlight) — and none of them actually killed the scroll habit. Doomersion's bet is different: don't compete with doomscrolling. Become it.
The startup, backed by Y Combinator in the W2026 batch, asks a simple question: if Gen Z is going to spend 2.5 to 3 hours a day staring at short videos anyway, why not make those videos teach them Japanese? It's less a language learning app than a hostile takeover of your brain's dopamine loop — and the early numbers suggest it's working.
15,000 downloads in the first two weeks. Power users logging 3+ hours daily. App Store reviews describing Doomersion as the app that replaced TikTok entirely. For a four-person team out of San Francisco, that's not a bad start.
What Doomersion Actually Does
Strip away the positioning and the core product is deceptively simple: a vertical video feed, TikTok-style, where every clip is in your target language. Below each video sits an interactive subtitle track. You tap a word you don't know, the app tells you what it means, how to pronounce it, and drops it into a flashcard deck. You keep scrolling. The next video is slightly harder than the last one.
That's it. That's the whole thing.
What makes it interesting isn't the feature set — it's the pedagogical philosophy baked into the UX. Doomersion is built around comprehensible input, the Krashen hypothesis that you acquire language by consuming content that's just barely above your current level (famously dubbed "i+1"). The algorithm doesn't drown you in content you can't parse, and it doesn't bore you with content you've already internalized. It keeps you perpetually in that sweet spot where you understand maybe 80-90% of what you're hearing and reading, and the remaining 10% becomes new vocabulary.
The founder, Mostafa Afr, didn't stumble onto this theory from a research paper. He lived it. A former professional Pokémon player who placed third at the 2016 World Championships, Mostafa spent six years self-studying Japanese through YouTube videos — before any app existed to help him do it systematically. The most-liked post on r/LearnJapanese over a two-year period? His. The product is essentially what he wished had existed when he started.
Target customer: primarily Gen Z, primarily mobile-first learners who find Duolingo's gamification childish and Rosetta Stone's structure suffocating. People who learn by consuming culture, not by drilling flashcards. People who are going to spend three hours on their phone regardless — Doomersion just reroutes that time.
