Ready-made decks, free.
A few good starting points while your own decks are still small. Tap one on your iPhone; each starts fresh, with no study history attached.
Spanish essentials
Sixty high-frequency words and phrases: greetings, question words, core verbs, everyday nouns. Spanish on the front, and the speak button pronounces each side in its own language.
US state capitals
All fifty, state on the front. You know Boston and Atlanta already; this deck is really about Pierre, Frankfort, and Jefferson City.
NATO phonetic alphabet
Alfa through Zulu, the official ICAO spellings. Learn it once and every confirmation code you read over the phone gets easier.
Multiplication facts
Every fact from 2 × 2 to 12 × 12, each pair once. Made for kids, quietly useful for adults who never quite nailed the sevens.
Getting a deck onto your iPhone
From this page
Tap a deck above and let Safari download it, then open the download (the ↓ button next to the address bar) and tap the file. If your iPhone shows a preview instead of opening Flickdeck, tap the Share button and choose Flickdeck — it imports as a new deck either way.
From a Mac or PC
Download the file here, then AirDrop it to your iPhone or drop it in iCloud Drive and open it from the Files app. Either way it lands in Flickdeck.
What importing does
Each download is an ordinary .flickdeck file, the same format the app uses when a friend shares a deck. It arrives as a brand-new deck with every card unstudied, and importing it twice just gives you two copies. Edit it, rename it, delete it: once it’s on your phone it’s yours.
Want a deck we don’t have?
Tell us what you’re studying and we’ll consider it for the library. Or build your own from a spreadsheet — the file format is plain JSON and documented.
Request a deck