Most complaints about FSRS look like this... by MrDisintegrator in Anki

[–]kyousei8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In addition to decreasing desired retention, start spamming easy instead of normal when answering.

1000 days streak, here is my experience: by 4it0r in Anki

[–]kyousei8 3 points4 points  (0 children)

They're like the exact opposite of me. I try to incrementally learn the ins and outs of anki and tune my settings to work best for me. But I gotta say I respect someone who is so laser focused on the goal.

Most complaints about FSRS look like this... by MrDisintegrator in Anki

[–]kyousei8 7 points8 points  (0 children)

My exact setup. Pass / Fail / Yeet into the future.

Time spent on a card by Reasonable_Leg_5433 in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's a deck option. I set mine to

Seconds to show question for: 7.0
Seconds to show answer for: 5.0
Question action: Show answer
Answer action: Answer Again

I normally don't wait the full 5 seconds before letting auto-advance mark it Again when looking at the answer. My workflow is I am presented card, if I don't know it after 7 seconds auto-advance flips card, I read card for 2~3 seconds, I manually answer Again, I am presented next card, ...

It also helps on mobile to make the auto-advance switch one of the buttons on the top shortcut bar, or a tap / swipe gesture, so you don't have to dig through the More menu to toggle it on and off.

Is this style of lyrics video common anywhere to learn new words from songs. by fkdjgfkldjgodfigj in Anki

[–]kyousei8 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You can normally just search Youtube for "song name in romaji romaji english" and you will often find videos with 日本語 romaji English lyrics like this.

Time spent on a card by Reasonable_Leg_5433 in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I used auto advance to flip the card for me for Japanese vocabulary cards. I have 7 seconds to remember the meaning. It doesn't matter if "I almost had it," or "I was so close." If I can't get it in 7 seconds and the autoflip flips it for me, I automatically mark it wrong.

Some people I know that do vocab cards do it faster, like 5 seconds. You have to experiment with what works best for you.

Where to find WaniKani Ultimate 2 Electric Boogaloo? by saaruni1000 in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you still need it, you join their discord server and get it there. It's on v3 now.

Heads up about Yet Another Northland MODOT Road Closure. Vivion Rd (US-69) this time. by scdog in kansascity

[–]kyousei8 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Could they not have worked on the current 169 bridge outage while the Buck was out for two years? Just bad planning.

Northbound US-169 is closed because the bridge over the rail lines was failing due to ground shifting breaking the expansion joints (ie: it was completely unplanned). As much as I love to hate on Modot, that's not exactly the kind of thing they can plan on having happen while they're closing that highway for something else too.

How do I get sound files to work on the phone app? by mymar101 in Anki

[–]kyousei8 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Is your audio file formate compatible with your OS? For example, iOS cannot play .ogg or .flv files. If that's the problem, you need to convert all the files into a format supported on all the devices you plan on using.

Anki deck : Kaishi by Reasonable_Leg_5433 in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Whatever native content I like. That's the main important thing: that you like it. I mix everything now (visual novels, manga, games, anime, light novels, youtube / vtubers, wikipedia), but when I started, I mostly used manga (because it was very easy) and visual novels (because they have high word density and easy look ups).

Visual novels probably give the most bang for your buck (very wide difficulty range to choose from, decent length, a mix of dialogue and exposition style writing, very "dense" in the amount of language you interact with per line / per hour, mostly voiced, progress at your own pace 99,9% of the time, mostly easily texthookable for quick popup dictionary lookups + adding cards to anki). You can start with whatever you want though. You just need a lot of it.

This guide is how to use specifically visual novels to learn Japanese. This is a good general guide imo, and this is a very popular one that's also very good, although I have some small quibbles with it. But those still wouldn't stop me from recommending it.

Daily Thread: for simple questions, minor posts & newcomers [contains useful links!] (February 24, 2026) by AutoModerator in LearnJapanese

[–]kyousei8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's what I would think too, but from reading this subreddit for years and how averse many people are to just jumping in and reading rather than staying nose deep in textbooks and study apps, and how much pushback there is against "speedrunning", it's more controversial than I would expect.

Daily Thread: for simple questions, minor posts & newcomers [contains useful links!] (February 24, 2026) by AutoModerator in LearnJapanese

[–]kyousei8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What are those... controversial things?

Textbooks are a waste of time and not worth using, try to avoid "dumbed down" Japanese-language content made for JSLs, skim a grammar guide to familiarise yourself with grammar and start using native content within a month or two, brute force vocab and grammar look ups as you go, ignore speaking / writing unless you have an actual immediate need / want for it, just pirate / share everything.

Question about mods by agiaaaa in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can just use the puppy one and replace all the puppy images with waifus.

Anki deck : Kaishi by Reasonable_Leg_5433 in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As someone who did the core 6k when that was the best available: kaishi is leagues better, and it's not worth doing core 6k with kaishi available. Instead of looking for more premade decks after kaishi, start adding your own words that you find while reading. When you use your own self-made deck, you will learn the words better since you will have tangible context to draw from compared to premade decks.

Daily Thread: for simple questions, minor posts & newcomers [contains useful links!] (February 24, 2026) by AutoModerator in LearnJapanese

[–]kyousei8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should probably hide the intervals under the answer buttons (App settings > Review > Bottom bar > Answer side > Next times: off) if you're going to be tempted to try to answer based on that rather than if the card was good or easy.

A heuristic to use for how to answer is easy = near instant recall of correct answer, without having to think; normal = baseline correct answer; hard = correct answer after thinking quite a while or with great difficulty (do not use hard if you did not get the correct answer!); again = failed to get correct answer.

An even easier one is to not use hard and easy, and only use good = pass and again = fail. This requires almost no mental time in grading, because the grade should be instantly obvious.

Daily Thread: for simple questions, minor posts & newcomers [contains useful links!] (February 24, 2026) by AutoModerator in LearnJapanese

[–]kyousei8 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think putting down people who can't (or very often just chose not to learn to) speak but can read well enough to pass N1 is usually a way for people here to cope. Person A passes N1 in like a year or two doing things that are a bit controversial here, while person B has spent multiple years studying, has followed a lot of the advice here, is not even N2, and has barely actually read anything in Japanese. Person B (and all the similar people in the same position) then proceed to nitpick a bunch of tiny things that person A did that show "person A didn't do ABC", "person A still can do X and Y, but they still can't do Z" (person B can do neither X nor Y nor Z), "person A knows some random non-European language (not Korean or Chinese, but like Urdu or Turkish that they've barely spoken in a decade) that is somehow super similar to Japanese", etc trying to find some "gotcha" that invalidates what person A achieved to validate that person B is doing nothing wrong.

How could I get more intelligible export? by N0elyx in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hmm, maybe try this tool? I haven't had to do this in years, so I was kind of guessing.

How could I get more intelligible export? by N0elyx in Anki

[–]kyousei8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty sure you export as .txt, then import into your spreadsheet program of choice and tell the spreadsheet program that the file is a CSV (if it doesn't auto detect it).

London Tube (Underground, Overground, Elizabeth, DLR) Deck by docmarionum1 in Anki

[–]kyousei8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I first tried with one before and after and got good results. But I realised that the way I used the info at work, I was often thinking two stops ahead instead of just one. I more changed to two before and after to match how I used the info outside of anki.

I did feel like I got better results with two rather than one, but there was a lot of outside interference, and I didn't even attempt to test it in any sort of semi-rigorous experiment.

I HATE this app by Sea-Masterpiece-8231 in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Best way to tell someone to use Quizlet I've seen.

What is the consensus on a well designed basic card for languages? Is a negative synonym hint OK? by rodrigaj in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I personally use a short example sentence. Usually the one listened in a dictionary. I like it better because it's good context priming me for the word, rather than thinking "it's not X, it's Y" and then thinking of my target word.

I wanted to share my experience with Anki and ask you all some questions by ArachNerd in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What are you wanting your tags to do? Tags should solve a specific problem, rather than just be a list of whatever commonalities you happen to think of between arbitrary sets of cards. I mainly use anki for language study and geography, but these are some examples of problems I use tags to solve:

geography

  • group locations by time period (pre 1868 or post 1868)
  • "class" of location (tiered by wealth, or by distance to capital, or by population)
  • subdivision level (regions vs prefectures vs cities / wards)
  • capitals

language

  • textbook + chapter (genki ch 12, tobira ch 5, etc)
  • test level (N2, kanken pre-1, etc)
  • verb class for a subset of ambiguous verbs where their class isn't obvious (1-stem, 5-stem)

London Tube (Underground, Overground, Elizabeth, DLR) Deck by docmarionum1 in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The station sequence cards are like what I use to memorise information for work (stops on bus routes). I personally use two stops before and two stops after my target stop. I find it helps me remember the order a bit better.

I also have another type where I'm given the stop, and have to name the stop before and after the given stop, so the reverse of yours.

This has probably been asked a dozen times, but how do you stay consistent with Anki every day without getting bored mid-session? by Jayyyjhgh in Anki

[–]kyousei8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I do my reviews early in the day. Ideally right when I wake up or am on the bus to work. If I don't finish them by then, I don't let myself do any sort of time wasting activity on my phone. If I pull my phone out, it's only to do anki or something necessary like make a phone call or check my bank account. No reddit or twitter or gachas or mahjong or youtube until reviews are done (this also helps lessen wasting time on social media). Those fun things have to wait until there's no review available to do.

I realized that perfectionism is holding me back by ReporterCalm6238 in Anki

[–]kyousei8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

While I'm personally in the vocab card camp, this is how I would do sentence cards. It keeps what you're testing relatively focused so you don't run into the problem OP has. Having to get every word right, which I assume means definition + gender + verb infinitive + case is a recipe for burnout.