Why Threom 2.0 feels calmer
After our first paying customers, one lesson became obvious: the product could not feel like a generic exam-prep dashboard. It needed to feel calmer, clearer, and more supportive under pressure. This redesign is the result of that shift.
From generic SaaS to study tool
The older UI did its job, but it still carried too much standard software energy: louder gradients, busier surfaces, and more visual pressure than a learner really needs before a stressful speaking test. The new version is deliberately calmer.
We moved toward softer paper-like surfaces, clearer editorial hierarchy, real product demos, and simpler navigation. The goal was not decoration. The goal was to help the interface get out of the learner's way.
Three colors, three jobs
Mint, lavender, and peach now act as gentle orientation markers across the product. They are not there to shout. They are there to help users understand where they are and what kind of work they are doing.
That visual system also reflects the Three-Room Method. We liked the idea that the product should quietly echo the same mental model we teach: clear stages, simpler transitions, and less cognitive friction when nerves are already high.
A simpler map through IELTS practice
On the IELTS home, the app now reads more like a calm map than a feature dump. The experience is grouped into practice by part, deeper guided practice, and progress. That sounds small, but under exam stress, fewer micro-decisions matter.
We also kept the trust principles that matter to us: clear labels, honest wording, and no fake urgency. Calm is not only a visual decision. It is also a product behavior decision.
More interface languages, based on real requests
The interface now supports English, Russian, Uzbek, and Kazakh. We expanded that set around the most requested user languages, because for many learners, the support around the practice matters almost as much as the practice itself.
If your native language is not there yet, you can tell us. The same goes for feature requests, rough edges, or parts of your prep flow that still feel confusing or stressful. The Feedback page is open for all of that.
This is a listening moment, not a finish line
We think of this redesign as a Threom 2.0 moment: the point where the product started to look more like its real shape after people began paying for it. But it is not a final statement. It is a clearer foundation.
If you want another interface language, a feature, or simply want to tell us where the product still adds pressure instead of reducing it, send us a note. That kind of feedback has already shaped this version, and it will shape the next one too.