Is final fantasy the best game to learn moonrunes with?

Is final fantasy the best game to learn moonrunes with?

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Other urls found in this thread:

realkana.com/study/
youtube.com/watch?v=6p9Il_j0zjc
www3.nhk.or.jp/news/easy/
twitter.com/AnonBabble

Any game aimed at children is good enough.

No because you need to know the runes before playing t. Cant learn those fucking kanas.

The OP pic contains enough shit that will stump even intermediate learners that I would hesitate to call it "good to learn moonrunes with."

However, you do have to start somewhere, so it ought to be somewhere that you're going to at least make efforts to enjoy.

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I've been sitting with the charts for months and can't learn shit. I was thinking maybe a game would help but I guess not.

no, that would be ultima.

Stop playing video games and apply to your studies.

I tried to just study but it went nowhere.

retard

I heard pokemon games use simple japanese

So just give up.
Delusional brainlet.

retard

You just have to suck it up man. The stuff you think is hard today is the same stuff you won't even waste brain power on the next. Start with pokemon or something and card words as Kanji, memorize them, card new ones, repeat. Also read Tae Kim's grammar guide to become vaguely aware of what is grammar vs what is word so you don't end up looking up nonexistent or incorrect words.

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if you just want to read them, do it with this realkana.com/study/
do the first column, then the 2nd, then first 2, then the 3rd, then the first 3, etc.
unironically took me only an hour to learn to read katakana this way.
if you want to write them as well, do it in the same order. write the first column, then try to write it from memory, etc.

flash cards are magic

>So just give up.
Yeah I guess I should

Why are there so many threads about learning weebspeak today

people are bored

>stuff you think is hard
Like A I U E O in hiragana

>can understand the meanings behind 3/4 of this
>can't recall almost a single reading

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I need to be able to read them, because just knowing words in romaji doesn't do anything.

While they don't use any kanji, they use japanese that a Japanese child would use. So it's paradoxically harder for a learner to read than something with more formal japanese + kanji.
In other words, you'll be able to read the sounds super easy, but you'll be confused by the homophones, colloquialisms and outright slang.

So then focus on readings? Or just play more and you're eventually going to stumble into something that cements it into your memory.

>play more
Runes alone won't teach you readings.

Neither will shitposting on an Australian cone snail harvesting message board. Now go do your reps.

Not an argument.

>if you just want to read them, do it with this realkana.com/study/
I did, everytime perfect. I went the first two perfectly many times. Closed it, pulled up a text and nothing, I remember nothing. It's easy when you know that it's some k- that you are looking for, but just pulling out randomly the same hiragana out of every hiragana is imbossible for me.

Absolutely fucking retarded, just stop and go play with some poo

Can any anons point me to some Bulgarian video games? I have a grammar textbook I'm about to crack open but I want some media to go along with it so I can put it to practice.

wikipedia has game lists from countries like that

But are the games actually written in Bulgarian or just made by Bulgarian developers? Also, the list of them look like garbage. I don't want to play Tropico or Asscreed. I was hoping anons could help me find something like RPG maker games in Bulgarian.

thanks a lot for making me cry, I hope you are happy.

If you haven't already, I would recommend putting more time into anki and/or wanikani. Especially wanikani.

:^) I am

Here's a resource I used when I was first starting out.
youtube.com/watch?v=6p9Il_j0zjc

They also have a free video on katakana as well.

My method was to follow along in a notebook and write it all out. I personally didn't make a single flash card. That's not a brag, but more of a testament to how effective the video was.

I've watched that too, but the problem persists. A I U and E are easy, I remember them by seeing, everything else get's mixed up. I know the difference between KE and KA, but when I see them without any context I don't know which one it is. Only if you ask "is this KE or KA" I can say what it is.

The best advice that I can give you is to practice reading more.
www3.nhk.or.jp/news/easy/
Don't worry about know what any of this translates to, just think of each sentence as a kana rush. Try to read each kana separately then eventually move on to forming complete words even if you don't know the meaning yet.

Oh crap it's katakana too, I haven't even touched those.

I found out about this website yesterday, it's really nice. News sites overall are a great way to learn languages, they helped me a ton with German.

Do you use a chart or what, I only picked up SHI and I.

I would occasionally refer to a chart if I got a couple of kana mixed up but eventually it should just become ingrained into your mind with enough reading.
Also, look up spaced repetition. It's probably the most effective way to memorize. I have an absolute shit short term memory so normally studying flash cards is a nightmare. But spaced repetition has been a life saver when studying vocab. Anki is a great space repetition app.

>if I got a couple of kana mixed up
But how are you supposed to read those news if you can read only 5 hiraganas.

I agree. Great way to work those reading muscles. To keep things vidya related, just reading Mario Maker level names from Japan is a nice pop quiz when playing.

Early in my studying I just focused on reading the kana, not translating. Take it in small steps.

The steps are as small as they can, I'm not translating, I'm having trouble seeing the differences between the kana and remembering their meaning.

PSA to tards:

Get a textboook.
Learn words (in kanji, tard), not kanji readings individually, you stupid soulless robot.
Get Graded Readers, they're a good series for eternal beginners like you to start reading with.
Stop posting crap about how to learn, instead actually learn.

This should help you get over the initial slump. You're likely fucked anyway, cause you're on Yas Forums, thus likely have a nigger-tier intelligence

>Learn words (in kanji, tard), not kanji readings individually,
Yeah kanji is far far far beyond what I can do.

How does posting about how to learn bad? I'm just trying to help with day 1 stuff.

this kana mess is disgusting
I'd play various RPGmaker games, when you have problems reading you can simply rev up ithvnr. Though if you're a beginner: Be wary of a few difficult games like Warau Warawau, Tobira Densetsu and Kaii Shoukougun (great games but they often use complicated sentences/words)

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Sounds like you're doomed. Try writing out the kanas.

They're doomed if they need help with that.

Also playing those will makes you a tranny, like it did to Kastel, Moogy and other Twitter personalities who popularized them in the West.

always the same fucking thread with the same fucking posts and the same fucking anons that will NEVER learn japanese

though trannies live in your head without paying any rent... you're not even right fucktard, Moogy had fuck all to do with "popularizing" the games I mentioned since they're not popular to begin with.

Cut the yuri or you'll end up like 'em.

shut up retard. I'll play whatever I want and will keep recommending it to others. Moogy pissing in your cereals won't stop me.

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So you're already on HRT?

This is why I avoid using anything but shows and movies with real people as resources to help me learn.

Play Style Savvy.

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it doesn't really matter, you just have to choose materials you personally find interesting. Personally I find dramas, Japanese movies and other riaju media dreadfully boring.

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The best game to learn moon is any game that you are motivated to play. It doesn't even matter if it's hard.
One of the worst things you could do is force yourself to play something you don't like just because its beginner friendly.

おうじょはおれのものだ!だれにもわたさん!
ひかりのせんしだと。こざかしいやつらよ!
このガーランドがけちらしてくれよう!

>わたさん
>ending a sentence with just だと
>くれよう

None of these are hard, of course, but they're what I would call more advanced forms of other basic grammar patterns, or variant grammar, if you will. You should start by learning those basic grammar patterns and their usage and only advance to variants afterwards.

That's the problem with games like this, They're not actually for beginner learners, they're for native Japanese people.

I guess already made this point, but I checked the pic and felt like making it too.

And that's why you really should get a textbook, at least for the basics. If you can't do even this, how can you learn anything?

Not all games are moonruned