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/jp/ - Otaku Culture

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>> No.26254690 [View]
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26254690

>>26252658
High hopes for all of them, they all definitely have high potential.

Ina is my favourite so far, but she seems to be much better alone than in a group. That's fine with me, solo streams are more comfy and what I end up watching the most, but I'm sure she'll be better in the group as she spends more time with them.

Amelia has shown in the collab stream that when she is a little more toned down she can be a lot more tolerable and downright enjoyable. Not my type, but I'm sure she'll do well since she speaks English and plays FPS games so she'll probably have the strongest normie western following.

Mori I like so far, she just seems to need a little time to really tune the character and she could be one of the ones I end up watching the most. Once her and the group are closer I think she could be a really fun one for collab stuff. I actually quite enjoyed the song she put out during the debut stream even though it's not the kind of stuff I listen to.

Shark is based. She can really fucking sing, I'll for sure watch all the stuff she puts out of that. I don't think I'll watch the streams too often, but I'm sure I'll end up watching a lot of highlights.

Chicken I actually know the least about so far, she's the only one that I haven't watched the debut stream of because I missed it so I'm going to watch it before watching her Fall Guys stream. I really hope she gets a good rest after the Fall Guys stream though. I can't imagine trying to put up this high energy character and trying to be funny and interesting when you're as sleep deprived as she probably is. I've been awake nearly 30 hours now and I feel like if I tried to do what they just did in the collab I'd just end up dead silent the whole time.


Overall, I give it a pretty good/10.
Give them more sleep please.

>> No.22000386 [View]
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22000386

>>21999096
>Is the truth that acquisition of Japanese is so gradual that by the time you can consider yourself fluent the novelty will have worn off?
this is the wrong question to ask. the reason why the "novelty" (which is really just the enthusiasm of learning japanese and of getting better at understanding the stuff you wanted to learn it for) wears off is not an intrinsic quality of the process of learning japanese, but a result of the mental habits of the people who set out to learn it.

look at how neurotic most people in this thread are about this process. every unknown word is an "omg i suck" "this language is impossible". they do shit like count and compare their reading speeds and get upset when it doesn't match other people's. they take any improvement for granted, ignoring or quickly dismissing their gains, while always exclusively focusing on the things they (and others) don't know.

even if they do get fluent with this attitude, by that time the language will have become just another thing they beat themselves with. they don't feel excited about it at the "end" because they didn't allow themselves to feel excited about it during the process. they beat the enthusiasm out of it. they do it to themselves.

>> No.21794862 [View]
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21794862

>>21793256
>I remember the cards I've made that have words that I've often seen while. I don't remember cards that have words I rarely see.
>It feels like anki doesn't actually work at all.
so if you're doing vocab and not sentence cards, then all anki is supposed to do is hold that word in place temporarily until your next natural encounter. it's very hard for information to stick long term when it's just a single, out of context word like that. those words only stuck if i saw them again in context soon (within one or two months), then anki did it's job because it kept me from forgetting before i saw it again in the wild.

the problem is you don't know exactly what words you'll see again soon enough for that to work. you may drill 50 new words one day and only see 15 of them within the next month or two.

sentence cards don't really have this problem because they have context on them, so they can stick longer for people. but they do take a lot longer to make and some people would rather spend that time just inputting instead.

>> No.21730336 [View]
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21730336

>>21730312
>irrelevant comparison, one person is doing more with japanese than the other
i thought anki wasn't effective though? if that were true it wouldn't matter right?

>> No.21667024 [View]
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21667024

In the beginning of this nondekinai edition. We had like ~30 posters for the first 12 hours of the thread.
Now that the dekinai edition is also up simultaneously, there's only 30 posters in there. So it's decently safe to assume that only half of the posters in these threads can even read the kanji included in the "毎日の日本語スレ"

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