I finally finished too!
It took me two tries, but I'm done! I can focus on the vocab/grammar and practice now!
Here's the story in case it interests/motivates someone :
I started 3 years ago, for 6 months, learnt about 500 kanji with this website, and then stopped because I was missing the time.
Then I started again a year after, with Anki this time, with the premade deck 'Heisigs RTK all-in-one v1.2b'. I liked it better.
The good news was that most of the kanji I learned, even without doing any reviews for a year, were still in my memory, so I just re-added them in a month.
Then it took me a year and a half to finish it.
I was doing Anki about 45mins a day : 30 mins reviewing + 15 mins adding between 0-30 new kanji (I found the good average for me was 10-15), sometimes maybe 15mins more per day. During the weekend, I was usually just reviewing, and sometimes not even all due kanji.
I was reviewing and learning in public transportation during my daily commute, which was really nice, no time wasted! (when I see people playing Candy Crush in the metro/bus, it makes me realize how much time we actually have to learn things!)
Now I think I went a bit slowly compared to people that I see here, even among the ones that don't rush, but I think I have a good retention now so that's all that matters, and anyway I wasn't in such a rush to learn Japanese.
Here are some stats concerning the second part of my learning (the last 1.5 years) :
Total: 32043 reviews
Average for days studied: 60.8 reviews/day
Total: 177 hours
Average for days studied: 20.2 minutes/day
Average answer time: 19.9s (3.0 cards/minute)
% Correct for Learning: 82%
% Correct for Young : 98%
% Correct for Mature: 90%
I think the real numbers concerning time are about twice as what Anki says (I'm not sure how it counts it, but that's what I observed, it corresponds to about 45 mins a day on average)
Now I'm not exactly sure what resources I will, I have the Core 10k, so maybe I'll start with the 2k, and check out some grammar on Imabi.net
It took me two tries, but I'm done! I can focus on the vocab/grammar and practice now!
Here's the story in case it interests/motivates someone :
I started 3 years ago, for 6 months, learnt about 500 kanji with this website, and then stopped because I was missing the time.
Then I started again a year after, with Anki this time, with the premade deck 'Heisigs RTK all-in-one v1.2b'. I liked it better.
The good news was that most of the kanji I learned, even without doing any reviews for a year, were still in my memory, so I just re-added them in a month.
Then it took me a year and a half to finish it.
I was doing Anki about 45mins a day : 30 mins reviewing + 15 mins adding between 0-30 new kanji (I found the good average for me was 10-15), sometimes maybe 15mins more per day. During the weekend, I was usually just reviewing, and sometimes not even all due kanji.
I was reviewing and learning in public transportation during my daily commute, which was really nice, no time wasted! (when I see people playing Candy Crush in the metro/bus, it makes me realize how much time we actually have to learn things!)
Now I think I went a bit slowly compared to people that I see here, even among the ones that don't rush, but I think I have a good retention now so that's all that matters, and anyway I wasn't in such a rush to learn Japanese.
Here are some stats concerning the second part of my learning (the last 1.5 years) :
Total: 32043 reviews
Average for days studied: 60.8 reviews/day
Total: 177 hours
Average for days studied: 20.2 minutes/day
Average answer time: 19.9s (3.0 cards/minute)
% Correct for Learning: 82%
% Correct for Young : 98%
% Correct for Mature: 90%
I think the real numbers concerning time are about twice as what Anki says (I'm not sure how it counts it, but that's what I observed, it corresponds to about 45 mins a day on average)
Now I'm not exactly sure what resources I will, I have the Core 10k, so maybe I'll start with the 2k, and check out some grammar on Imabi.net

). I'd also like to add that this has been the weirdest learning experience I've ever had and probably will ever have.

for JLPT N2 (both that exam got harder and I got way less good at the language). Have since been studying hard with rtk1 a big part of the schedule. 2042 down now and with the supplement, pretty confident to get over the line in N2 this July.
Well done and good luck in future to all who come after!!