FYI, I have placed this in feedback, because I would find it very useful if the speech recognition and conversations would use usted. I'm honestly a bit stumped about why tú (only) would be taught. From my experience, there's a real chance of offending people using tú forms, and no chance of offending people you don't know when using usted.
Include formal conjugations in early lessons?

RachelS84
May 29, 2021

marieg-rocket languages
May 30, 2021
Hi RachelS84,
Thank you for your feedback; the tone of the course is to try to make it informal, and that's the reason why you would hear "tú" more often than "usted"; however we do emphasize the difference between the two and when to use each; the "usted form is actually used in lesson 1.4, the fourth lesson in Level 1.
Kind Regards
Thank you for your feedback; the tone of the course is to try to make it informal, and that's the reason why you would hear "tú" more often than "usted"; however we do emphasize the difference between the two and when to use each; the "usted form is actually used in lesson 1.4, the fourth lesson in Level 1.
Kind Regards