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oh man.... you two are both talking about the worst RPG's I have ever played. regardless of their relation to japanese, these games should be banned. they are that poor. you'll learn hiragana and katakana better with "remembering the kana" and you can study words faster and more efficiently with spaced repetition software. Play a game because you want to, not because you think it will help you with your studies, cos in both of these cases, it probably won't. you will eventually put of playing it because it is so stupid. get into the Final Fantasy series like some of the guys on the board are doing here or play Zelda for the DS and study like you got a pair!!
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Repetition software has its place but it isn't very fun.. I don't play Knuckles because its an efficient way to learn, I play to mix things up for a while as a new way to sustain my interest on the long arduous road to kanji fluency.. I mean, granted, it doesn't hold up to today's rpgs, but as homebrew retro game, I think it stands up pretty well on its own.
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Hey Yorkii, I agree that I need to grow a pair (thanks for the good laugh).
Zelda just seems like it would be way over my head. It is actually more of a long term goal to play it...
I know kana so I think the slime game looks pretty annoying starting out with kana. But it seems that knuckles game you can start straight with kanji readings or perhaps Heisig kanji. Seems like a good warm-up for DS Zelda. Am I wrong?
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You can tap words in DS Zelda for furigana. The game seems to be made for fairly young kids. The Japanese isn't that hard and the game is ridiculously easy - I beat most of the bosses without losing a single heart.
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Furigana is good for learning the readings but will RTK 1 be enough to know what is going on in Zelda? It still seems like I would be able to read it but not know what is going on with my abysmally low vocabulary...
I bought なおっておぼえる for the DS a while back and haven't touched it since because it was over my head.
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Final Fantasy 6 is a retro game and is better than Knuckles.
I downloaded Knuckles and played a bit... it is terrible. Lets go back to FF and Zelda.
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I tried that Knuckes game....it was sooooo sloooooow. After a couple battles I couldn't take it and stopped. The graphics were old fashioned, I don't know why people like that. I guess it's an excuse for poor quality. I can't say anything about plot, since I didn't get far.
SFA...I played this game to. I didn't like the plot or graphics, but the slime battles were very effective for me. I finished learning all the kanji meanings this way, in a very short time. It's not a good game, but it was much better than dry slow flashcards. The member ship was different when I signed up, $2/month. So that wasn't a problem then.
Playing games IN Japanese is good. But it doesn't directly teach you anything, it's up to you to look up words and remember them.
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I never liked Slime Forest Adventure very much. It took too long to get to the Japanese learning bit, and the free version has so few kanji that it's pointless.
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One of my friends made a build of Nethack (oldschool rpg) that both has lots of kanji quiz based combat /w little dead time, AND follows Heisig. The question database is apparently just a plain text file so you can add/remove kanji as you see fit. It's also open source so you could make it drill vocab or whatever you want with some simple changes. He said he was going to release it last weekend so I'll ask him about a url.
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LOL, I didn't expect you guys to be so hard on this game! Its true that it is very slow (I wish you could speed the battles up), but I really do think its more fun than just sitting around with flashcards for hours on end. I don't think the graphics are an "excuse for poor quality".... But rather, I think its about what you would expect from a lone individual making a game in his basement on zero budget and expecting no money for it... I can't play games like FF 6 or Zelda in Japanese because I have very little grasp on the vocab and grammar. Not understanding the details of the plot would just be too frustrating for me. Furthermore, aside from the slowness of the game, Knuckles basically IS repetition flashcard software... The battles occur quite frequently... you walk around for just a couple econds and bam!... I just think its kind of neat to have a fairly interesting plot as an incentive to keep you going for a while... The dialogue, imo, is actually better than that of the majority of 8 or 16 bit rpg games that existed back in the day.
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Cracky, yes the Wesnoth game definitely looks to be better quality, but if you look at the credits page, it looks like about 100 people or so were involved in the production of that game!
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playadom, very nice.
I am also thinking about my next project, another study tool.
In the meanwhile, my friend and I have been building up a quizbot on IRC. We have each level of JLPT on it so far. The lighthearted competition makes it incredibly fun.
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i tried slimeforest but it is very oldskool, the problem is that the gap to normal games is rather large.
does anyone know of decent pc games with furigan over the kanji?
those "ecchi visual novels" like kanon, da capo, x-change and some games without the "H" like ever 17 that are very nice to play and have a lot of text, so if there a few titles out there that use furigana that would be a reason for me to buy it.
one of of the many reasons i want to learn japanese is to play such games, what beter way then to learn japanese by playing them?
the problem is everything i know of is translated or for the moment way over mine head, furigana would lower the gap considerable.
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I was going to pull out KiCL again when I read on their web site that a Heisig keyword file was available. Sadly, their definition of 'available' seems to be 'formerly available via a broken link on a much-neglected forum'. Does anyone have this Heisig keyword file, or know of a reliable place to get it (i.e. you just downloaded it yesterday, not two years ago, and you know it's there)? I don't see inputting 865 keywords and kanji myself, and I don't know how to make the spreadsheet I have into a text file readable by that program.
Edited: 2008-07-11, 5:40 pm