![]() Don’t get me wrong, the format is not easy to learn, but it’s completely digestible given time and a little patience. It automatically helps me practice what I’m struggling on, and skips what I’ve already mastered. I use the review feature daily, which is essentially the smartest flashcards app I have ever seen. Wanikani is just a website, but displays well on both phone and laptop, with hotkeys for quick navigation and playing back helpful voice pronounciations. Wanikani has by far been my favorite learning tool, not just for the learning, but the whole package. Every lession is paired with three practice sentences of incremental difficulty, hilarious mnemonics, and comical lore involving crabigators and some reacurring eccentric charachter Koichi. WaniKani delivers short, concise lessons one at a time, for each Radical, Kanji, or Vocabulary in Japanese language. ![]() It’s straight to the point, down and dirty, nitty and gritty. This webapp is just the challenge I was looking for when I abandoned Memrise.
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