Do you own physical manga volumes, Yas Forums? Which was the first one you bought? Post your bookshelf

Based Hunterchad. Impressive collection, my friend.

I used Anki and for every new kanji I ran into I wrote it down 50 to 100 times. Plus I made sure to learn around ten or so a week. And the thing about how kanji looks like what it's supposed to represent is mostly a meme.

>Hiragana and katakana are easy for the most part.
kana is literally 1-2 days.
>i kinda understand that characters are supposed to look like things
Nope.
It's more like kanji are build from simpler characters called radicals (some of them are used as standalone characters too). And these these characters are often pretty logical (like to most common example of 木, 林, 森 - tree, woods, forest). SOME kanji looks like objects that they are describing, but it's rather risky.

compounds, not characters, sorry.

>SOME kanji looks like objects that they are describing, but it's rather risky.
And it depends on your imagination.
Mnemonics learning is a key of learning kanji btw.

well shit, my memory's not that good so it seems like a nightmare to study.

It may be helpful, but so far I've found the most important thing is reading every day.

Yes
FMA
I would but I've been quarantined away from my house so there's only the stuff I bought while at Uni.

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My collection in russian.
The first manga I bought was first volume of spice and wolf. I saw it 5 years ago, before that I didn’t even think that someone was publishing manga here.
Over the past year, the manga industry in russia has grown very much, publishers began to publish one piece, akira, fma, abyss, licensed evangelion, berserk, fate zero and fake. I hope the upcoming crisis will not bury all this.

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based taste