Restaurant Words in Korean Practice Game
Use the game above to master restaurant words in Korean.
There’s no better (or more exciting) way to learn Korean vocabulary especially food-related words that pop up in everyday life, K-dramas, and Korean food culture. Whether you’re ordering samgyeopsal, asking for more kimchi, or figuring out what’s on a menu full of tteokbokki and bibimbap, this is the kind of vocab you’ll actually use.
Take a minute to study the list below, then dive into the game. You might even surprise yourself and dominate in PvP mode against other K-learners. Ready to level up your Korean like a local? Let’s go!
in Korean | in English | S |
---|---|---|
식당 (sikdang) | restaurant | |
음식점 (eumsikjeom) | dining place | |
메뉴 (menyu) | menu | |
주문하다 (jumunhada) | to order | |
계산하다 (gyesanhada) | to pay | |
포장하다 (pojanghada) | to take out (to-go) | |
여기요 (yeogiyo) | Excuse me (to call staff) | |
물 (mul) | water | |
밥 (bap) | rice | |
반찬 (banchan) | side dishes | |
고기 (gogi) | meat | |
김치 (kimchi) | kimchi | |
국 (guk) | soup | |
찌개 (jjigae) | stew | |
불고기 (bulgogi) | bulgogi (marinated beef) | |
삼겹살 (samgyeopsal) | pork belly (K-BBQ) | |
냉면 (naengmyeon) | cold noodles | |
김밥 (gimbap) | gimbap (Korean sushi roll) | |
떡볶이 (tteokbokki) | spicy rice cakes | |
순두부찌개 (sundubu-jjigae) | soft tofu stew | |
갈비 (galbi) | ribs | |
전 (jeon) | Korean pancake | |
맛있어요 (masisseoyo) | it’s delicious | |
더 주세요 (deo juseyo) | please give me more | |
맵지 않게 해 주세요 (maepji anke hae juseyo) | please make it not spicy | |
젓가락 (jeotgarak) | chopsticks | |
숟가락 (sutgarak) | spoon | |
포크 (pokeu) | fork | |
나이프 (naipeu) | knife | |
컵 (keop) | cup | |
접시 (jeopsi) | plate | |
냅킨 (naepkin) | napkin | |
물티슈 (multisyu) | wet tissue | |
예약하다 (yeyakada) | to reserve | |
자리 (jari) | seat / table | |
빈 자리 (bin jari) | empty table | |
기다리다 (gidalida) | to wait | |
계산서 (gyesanseo) | bill / check | |
현금 (hyeongeum) | cash | |
카드 (kadeu) | card | |
팁 (tip) | tip | |
맛없어요 (mat-eopseoyo) | it’s not tasty | |
배불러요 (baebulleoyo) | I’m full | |
더 드릴까요? (deo deurilkkayo?) | Shall I give you more? | |
이거 뭐예요? (igeo mwoyeyo) | What is this? | |
추천해 주세요 (chucheon hae juseyo) | Please recommend something | |
음료수 (eumryosu) | beverage | |
주스 (juseu) | juice | |
콜라 (kolla) | cola | |
맥주 (maekju) | beer | |
소주 (soju) | soju | |
막걸리 (makgeolli) | Korean rice wine |
Why Learn Korean Through a Game?
Learning Korean restaurant and food words through a game is not just fun. It is one of the fastest and most effective ways to actually remember the words and use them in real life. Instead of boring flashcards and textbooks, you dive straight into K-culture through food. From samgyeopsal and tteokbokki to ordering like a pro in a K-drama café scene.Game-based learning helps Korean vocabulary stick faster because it feels natural. You will find yourself recognizing Korean words just by playing. That is when language learning becomes addictive in a good way.
Some Words Are Easy Some Are a Challenge
Let’s be real. Some Korean food words are super easy. Take kimchi for example. You already know it. But what about jjukkumi, sundubu jjigae, or maepji anke hae juseyo (please make it not spicy). Those can be harder to remember.That is where the game helps. You will not even notice how often you repeat words while playing. Without cramming, you start recognizing and saying them naturally. It is practice disguised as fun and that is powerful.
Immersive and Interactive Experience
One of the best things about learning Korean through a game is how real it feels. Instead of just reading lists, you are ordering bibimbap, asking for the bill, and choosing your drink in a Korean restaurant simulation.It is not passive studying. It is fully interactive. The game puts you inside real life K food moments that mirror things you would experience in Korea or see in K-Dramas. That emotional connection makes the vocabulary stay in your memory for the long term.
Personalized and Self Paced Learning
Everyone learns differently and games are built for that. If you are already familiar with basic words, you can skip ahead. If you need to repeat a tricky sentence like igeo mwoyeyo (What is this), you can do it as many times as you want.You are in full control. That freedom keeps you motivated and makes the learning experience way more enjoyable than memorizing a word list again and again.
Realistic and Practical Context
Food and restaurant vocabulary in Korean is not just nice to know. It is essential. Whether you are traveling to Seoul, ordering Korean BBQ, or reading subtitles in your favorite drama, these words come up all the time.Games put you into those situations directly. You will learn to ask for water (mul juseyo), request extra side dishes (banchan deo juseyo), or explain that you do not eat spicy food. You do it all without worrying about grammar rules. You just use the words naturally in real conversations.
Overall Language Skill Improvement
When you use a game like LangLandia to learn Korean, you are doing more than memorizing vocabulary. You are listening to how native speakers talk, improving reading comprehension, and building sentence structure naturally.With visual aids, sound, and interactive dialogue, you develop full language skills in a way that feels more like exploring than studying. It is not just a game. It is your shortcut to real world Korean fluency.
Try the Full Game

In conclusion, learning Korean restaurant and food words through this game can be a fun engaging and effective way to improve your language skills. It gives you a fresh and interactive experience where you can practice vocabulary in real situations that actually matter in daily life.
Whether you are learning how to order bulgogi ask for more banchan or understand what your favorite K drama character just said at dinner this is the kind of Korean you will truly use.
If you are ready for a complete online game experience for learning Korean try the LangLandia app and begin your journey today.
Download here!
If you enjoyed this article explore more of our free Korean learning resources. Visit our Korean blog for vocabulary guides culture tips and fun study hacks that make learning feel like play.