Translation apps miss the point
Google Translate gives you words. You need context. "How do I politely decline an invitation in Japanese?" "Is it rude to tip in this country?" "What does this menu actually mean — not literally, but what should I order?"
Amili isn't a translator — it's a cultural companion that understands nuance, context, and your personal preferences.
It knows how you travel
Amili remembers you hate tourist traps, love street food, are vegetarian, and prefer walking over taxis. It doesn't suggest the same generic top-10 list everyone else gets — it gives recommendations based on who you actually are.
You: I'm at this tiny ramen shop and the menu is all in Japanese. What do I order?
Amili: Since you're vegetarian, look for "yasai ramen" (野菜ラーメン) — that's vegetable ramen. If they have shoyu base (醤油), go with that — you loved the soy-based one in Osaka. Want me to write a message in Japanese asking if they can make it without the pork broth?
Instant cultural briefings
Landing in a new country? Ask Amili for a quick briefing: tipping culture, greetings, things to avoid, useful phrases. Not from a guidebook — tailored to your travel style and what you've told it matters to you.
Your trip diary that talks back
Tell Amili about your day. It remembers every place you visited, every dish you loved, every person you met. Months later, ask "What was that amazing restaurant in Lisbon?" and it knows.