>game has Japanese text
Game has Japanese text
Other urls found in this thread:
gamespark.jp
vocaroo.com
twitter.com
There are people who's job it is to make those cyber tron scripts readable in an earth language.
>game is nip only
>its shit
Every single time.
>>game has Japanese text
>doesn't matter cuz jap writing sucks
>avatarfags
>weebs
>same thread every day
Yup it‘s tranny time
gamespark.jp
>Good game is in Chinese.
>The devs barely scrape by an English translation with their high school English, but can't afford a Japanese translation after trying hard to get it greenlit.
>All those Japanons crying about not having learned English in school.
Good luck with your English or Mandarin self-studies, Nanashi.
EOPs are getting BTFO hard having not learned some form of runes by now.
Chinese is the true thinking man's choice since the next 5-15 years will likely bring more, higher-quality Chinese games to market that may or may not receive proper translations.
Honestly, erotic fiction in Japanese is just abysmal. And no, I'm not just talking about garbage 5 page doujin. Like, I enjoy Japanese lit quite a bit sometimes as much as lit in my native language, but pop culture product writing is so much worse its remarkable.
>higher-quality Chinese games
High quality and chinese cant be used in one sentence sry.
>likely bring more, higher-quality Chinese games to market
Why would you expect this at all? The Chinese market went from 0 to monetized grind garbage without any of the steps in between. There is _no_ nascent indie or artgame scene in China, which is remarkable given the size and worth of the industry there.
I started learning recently. I read somewhere that it takes 4 years to get fluent in Japanese so I’m talking it slow and keeping up with my Anki reps. Once I finish Tae Kim I’m gonna try to read Yotsubato.
Chinese weebs have plenty of resources and passion to put out a great game every now and then. They even have a few interesting genres like those top-down RPGs of theirs.
Overall, though. If you know English and Japanese, you've got your ass covered since any Chinese game gets translated into one of those languages sooner than later.
Game name?
I'm actually having my online japanese classes right now, but I can't be bothered to pay attention. Actual classes made me more engaged, but through Skype it's just not the same.
Banner of the Maid, pretty fun SRPG. You play as Napoleon's sister who joins the revolution instead of watching from the sidelines. Covers a good bit of the history behind the revolution, even has the expedition to Egypt.
some hot piece of slant eye ass teaching you?
Yeah, I go to an actual japanese institute and this year's teacher is actually a young woman. Her email ends with 95 so I'll just assume she's 25 y/o. She's lovely and has a cute voice and all but I seriously can't be bothered with this system. I guess I'll just catch up on my own later on.
>snow speaks Japanese
you can either tell walmart to stop ordering cheap shit, or stop shopping there. china just makes whatever the customer orders.
>current year
>still not reading moon runes
孫氏宣奴馬鹿。
Do you?
your mother does too
Why do chinks have this much of an inferiority complex over another country improving their language?
I wrote that in Japanese, user.
I don't even know how Chinese say "says" nowadays, albeit it used to be 曰 in classical. Idiot is not a baka, either. The name stays the same, 奴 is the only real Chinese influence there used more as you (you know, like the cool kidz in bosozoku gangs do) instead of the more typical "that guy".
>I wrote that in Japanese
I'm pretty sure you just wrote a single huge noun, then. What were you trying to convey with it?
国語/標準語 is not the only Japanese there is, mate, Japanese learn this shit in high school. So I had a bit of fun with your bigshot attitude.
If you could read moon runes. Not as a Chink or some student of history, but a lowly teen-year old like those from an anime, you'd be able to read it.
>So I had a bit of fun with your bigshot attitude.
Whose bigshot attitude? That was my first post, don't project your insecurities on me.
>you'd be able to read it.
Would I find it in video games? If not then I see no reason to.
>Would I find it in video games?
Yeah. Play strategy games, you faggot.
not him but post an example
like the most complex stuff I see in games are just words that can easily be divided by pairs of kanji
I don't know user I'm having a lot of fun playing untranslated games. Which nip-only games have you played?
Nobunaga's Ambition Online.
>strategy games
don't like 'em. Anything else?
you mean the names of each thing? Because the explanations are pretty standard japanese
Names (in this example) and older/noble wording.
Even the first example was just Sun Tzu + a more noble, literary way of saying "says" with the verb in the middle because random, but quickly understandable kanbun is the way to go when talking about shit like Sun Tzu.
So are there any lesser-known management games in Japanese for me to cut my teeth on? I'm just fine without translations.
>シミュレーションRPG
Every fucking time.
This kind of flexing reminds me of time when I interacted with highschool girls who decided to learn Japanese (and eventually gave up). Stroking yourself does nothing for increasing competence, you should know this.
Seconding. I usually just play something like TTD in moon but it'd be nice to play something else.
What's the best way to study and remember kanjis?
Should i focus on radicals/stroke order/readings? I wrote all 214 radicals on my notebook for reference just in case.
Any websites or book you recommend?
Is there a progressive order in which i should study kanjis?
Is it worth it to get into kanjis before even fully understanding all the particles?
Is it better to study them in combination with other kanjis or by themselves?
I'm in the minority opinion, but Heisig worked remarkably well for me. It can't be the only thing you do with Japanese, but it provided a great system for me to learn, recognize, and remember kanji that supercharged the rest of my learning.
どうして「皆の日本語」のタイトルを消しましたか。
僕もこの本から自分で勉強します。
S'cool
Japanese threads on Yas Forums would be way comfier if people stopped the autistic pissing contests. A pipe dream
I have never countered another language learning community as obsessed with pissing on one another as Japanese. It's an incredible turnoff and leads to me always just hiding my powerlevel instead of engaging. Like, I actually want to talk to people and share the stuff that interests me, find out neat things to read from other people, etc, but it's just so tiresome finding the one person to talk to in the hundreds that want to shout at me what hot shit they are because they learned their 10th kanji.
I once got banned for like two weeks for posting "personal information" because I accidentally let through a single extra thing, so nowadays I intuitively cover everything just in case. Basically paranoia.
You put your ass down on your chair every day and practice. I see all these Japanese learners whining about kanji, and I was afraid of them too. That is, up until I took my first semester of Chinese, where we used them from the very beginning, learned some radicals, and realized that it wasn't that bad, you just have to put a lot of effort into it. Some people recommend the Heising method, but to me, it looks like the best way to get burned out and hate Japanese before being able to order sushi. When I learn a language, I want to learn to use it. To each their own, I guess.
>Should i focus on radicals/stroke order/readings? I wrote all 214 radicals on my notebook for reference just in case.
Absolutely use the correct stroke order. It will become obvious very soon, you will just look at most kanji, and you'll know how to write them. Learning readings on its own is a useless meme; you can't use those for anything, and you'll get a feel for those once your vocabulary has gotten bigger. Learning radicals and basic kanji is good, kanji books usually start with those. When you learn a new word, learn (1) the kanji (2) the reading (3) how to use the word in at least 1 sentence/situation.
>Is there a progressive order in which i should study kanjis?
It is useful to start with the basic ones (because you get a feeling for radicals), but after that, not really, just learn the ones that you use. The ones you encounter in a beginner-level textbook are sure to come up all the time in everyday Japanese.
>Is it worth it to get into kanjis before even fully understanding all the particles?
Absolutely, study kanji as you progress with everything else, just as you study grammar and vocab. Kanji are not difficult to use, there're just a lot of them.
>Is it better to study them in combination with other kanjis or by themselves?
As I said, study the words, not the individual kanji. It will come together.
You can start reading Yotsuba to fairly early on. The Kansai colloquialisms will throw you for a loop, but other than that you can read it as you learn things, keep an English translation on the side as reference. I started reading it less than halfway into Tae Kim's guide and I'd do a leisurely 1-2 pages a day (depending on text volume). Confusing colloquialisms are easy to google since many ask the same questions specifically about sentences from Yotsuba to, hilariously.
I just started reading the Mario Land Manga and a thoroughly enjoying it.
ニューハーフの管理人さんですねぇ
WHAT DID YOU JUST SAY?!
Jesus, what am I reading?
And this shit right here is why I don't want to translate official games anymore.
Stupidity is what you're reading.
a fascinating creature called twitter user. It has the unique characteristic that it is quite sane in the Asian regions, but elsewhere it suffers from mental instability.
So are you in Japan right now? I went a few years ago and studied Japanese six months but besides being satisfied with what I learned (passed N4) I was disappointed with the rest of Japan and Japanese people in general.
Why? Because it didn't match your animus?
>game has japanese text
No problem, OP.
Why? I lived in Japan for a few years before moving to Korea and Japan was based. I still have friends that I talk to almost daily. Was your Japanese not good enough to fully experience and be comfortable?
I had gone before so I knew it wasn't anime lala-land. My Japanese was never good enough so I had to limit myself to kindergarten conversations. I tried being social, going to bars, clubs, trying to meet people online, at meet-ups, going to school events, etc. but nothing ever stuck. I got tired of chasing people to do stuff every other day only for them to completely forget me when I came back to my country. I ended up satisfied with the school and what I learned in it, but I felt like the rest of the experience surrounding it was a big waste of time, energy and money. I couldn't meet any long-lasting friends, no connections, couldn't get laid once in six months, etc.
What a shame.
Maybe it was your lack of language ability that did it. I went there for a few months before getting sent there again for a few years for a work, and in the time I was back in the US, a lot of my friends were blowing my Line asking when I'd come back, and I haven't been there in years and I still talk to them. It sucks that you weren't able to enjoy it, but good thing it was only 6 months of your life.
Yeah, it was mostly my fault I couldn't get more out of the trip. I was 29 at the time and had never been the most social person, but damn during those six months I tried hard. I still intend to consume Japanese media, but have no intentions of furthering my knowledge of the language or going there again.
How did you manage to learn enough nip to comfortably play a long ass game like P5?
Iron will and lots of studying.
The pictured game is P5S, but I also did play P5 in Japanese. It only really got rough towards the end and when things got super political.
school at 29?
Are you guys learning Japanese for the sake of the language or is it only so you could consoom more content?
Stop speaking like a faggot
What's the best way to get better at writing/speaking? My listening and reading comprehension are okay but I can't produce for shit. Going to Japan later in the year so want to prepare a bit.
I've been using the mini essay writing exercises from minna no nihongo and started Hellotalk.