![]() ![]() The only big downsides for me are that if you’re using premade decks (courses), you can’t alter the entries. It also helps that the website is visually very appealing, and that the ‘mems’ you use to learn vocab and kanji are very entertaining. I am a competitive person, and seeing my friends study, and getting points, makes me want to study just as much. The reason I think memrise works better for me, is because the decks are already divided, and more importantly: the leaderboard. I don’t know.Ī few months ago I started using, which is a website that also lets you study with SRS. Maybe because the decks I was studying were so big and they seemed to never end. I tried for about a year, also using it as a tool to keep up with course work at university, but I hated it. Were any of you able to fix what caused you to dislike Anki? How did you do it? Or have you decided to move from Anki onto something else? What did you replace Anki with as your new best method? The fastest way to learn Japanese isn’t necessarily using the best method, but using the best method that you personally enjoy. Stop worrying that you won’t learn Japanese that fast if you move onto something else. You may be different, and there is nothing wrong with that. But I always enjoyed it, and was using it at its true 90% efficiency. Yes, I and many others have used Anki to massive success. Learning Japanese is about creating your own strategy guide. If you really enjoy the other method, you will achieve its true efficiency, and the choice of what to do becomes clear. So for someone who dislikes Anki that continues using it, the above numbers will probably look more like: You will start zoning out and being distracted much more easily You won’t be in a good mood/mind set while using itģ. Who doesn’t want to learn Japanese faster? But a method you use that you don’t like will never achieve it’s true study efficiency. Normally, you would steer towards the more efficient study method. Something else (Method 2) = 70% study efficiency That’s it.Ĭontinuing to use an efficient tool that you hate is inefficient This doesn’t matter. What matters is that you continue to enjoy studying Japanese. This site focuses significantly on Anki usage, and constantly praises it as one of the most efficient and effective tools out there for learning Japanese as fast and awesomely as possible. Have you tried to make it more fun with enhancements like adding graphics and audio? Have tried to understand how Anki gets easier the more you use it? Even after countless attempts to change the way you use and approach Anki, are you still suffering? ![]() Maybe you don’t feel the need to continue. Maybe you feel it isn’t worth the effort. But you can’t bare the thought of using Anki anymore. You are just as motivated and put in just as much time as anyone else. But you face a troubling problem, and one that you feel guilty about: You understand the benefits, why it is so popular, and you know that it is a great tool. You’ve used it for weeks, maybe even months. You’re following the method on this site and other sites that revolve around Anki, the supreme online flash card and memory program. ![]()
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