Comparisons

Pinyora vs DuChinese — Which Reading App Should You Pick?

Honest comparison of Pinyora and DuChinese for Mandarin reading practice — what each does well, where they differ, and how to choose.

DuChinese is the most popular Chinese reading app on the market — and for good reason. It has a deep library of graded stories, professional narration, and a polished UX. So why build Pinyora at all?

The honest answer: DuChinese is great, but it's not the only useful approach. Here's where each tool shines, and how to decide which fits your learning style.

Quick verdict

If you want… Pick
The biggest catalog of graded reading material with audio DuChinese
Pre-vetted stories and a passive consumption flow DuChinese
To read your own texts (menus, signs, articles, books) Pinyora
Image-to-text scanning of real-world Chinese Pinyora
One free tier that covers a complete learning loop Pinyora
Story-by-story tap-to-translate with native-speaker audio DuChinese

Most serious learners end up using both — DuChinese for fresh stories, Pinyora for everything outside a curated app.

What DuChinese does well

  • Catalog depth. Hundreds of stories across six difficulty levels (Newbie → Master), plus weekly new content. You can read for an hour and still find something fresh.
  • Audio narration. Every story has a native-speaker recording, often with male and female voice options. Excellent for ear training.
  • Polished tap-to-translate. Tap any word, get pinyin + definition + audio. Mature and bug-free.
  • Story discovery. Topic tags and difficulty filters make it easy to pick the right next read.

If your goal is "I want to spend 30 minutes a day reading curated material with audio," DuChinese is hard to beat.

What Pinyora does differently

Pinyora started from a different question: what about the 80% of Chinese text that isn't in any reading app?

Real-world Chinese — restaurant menus, street signs, instagram captions, subway announcements, the back of a snack package — never appears in graded readers. Pinyora is built for that:

  • Image scanning (limited free, unlimited with Pro). Point your camera at any Chinese text. Pinyora extracts it, lets you tap any word, and saves the new vocabulary to your library.
  • Paste-your-own-text reading. Drop in an article, a song lyric, a chat message. Same tap-to-translate flow, on your text.
  • URL reader (limited free, unlimited with Pro). Paste a Chinese website URL — Pinyora pulls the article, strips the navigation, and gives you a clean reading view.
  • Built-in graded library for when you want curated material. Smaller than DuChinese's, but free and growing.
  • One vocabulary list across everything. Words you save from a story, a menu scan, and a pasted article all live in the same list. No siloed decks per source.

If your goal is "I want to read everything Chinese I encounter," that's what Pinyora is for.

Pricing comparison

DuChinese Pinyora
Free tier A few stories per week, limited features All stories + unlimited saved vocabulary
Paid ~$11/month or $90/year $9.99/month
Audio narration Yes, every story Built-in browser TTS (less natural)
Image scan No Limited free, unlimited with Pro
Paste-your-own No Limited free, unlimited with Pro
Vocabulary review Yes Yes

DuChinese is the better value if all you need is the curated library. Pinyora is the better value if you also want to read non-app content.

Who should pick which

Pick DuChinese if: you mostly want a "Netflix for Chinese stories" experience — pick a story, read it with audio, repeat. The catalog and audio quality are where it wins.

Pick Pinyora if: you want to read Chinese in the wild — menus you can't pronounce, signs at the airport, articles your colleague sent you, songs you're trying to understand. Plus a graded library for when you don't have anything specific to read.

Use both if: you're serious about the language. They cover non-overlapping use cases. DuChinese for daily curated reading, Pinyora for everything else.


Try Pinyora free — read every story and build your vocabulary without paying. Pro removes limits on paste, URL reader, scan, and translation tools.