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Learning Japanese with VNs - A 2 Year Summary - r/visualnovels (via libreddit)
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I'd argue it has benefits and drawbacks. You're being exposed to both parts of the language (listening and reading), but you're not being forced to truly parse Japanese dialogue. It does far more for your reading ability than your listening ability. When the voiced sections come up, I tend to look away from the screen and try to parse the voiceover. That way, I get quality listening and reading practice in the same session. My listening skills are far behind my reading skills at the moment.
My VN workflow looks like my anime workflow with one more step. Extract the Japanese text out to my clipboard with Textractor or mpvacious, generate an Anki card with Yomichan, and then update the card with the image + audio. Mpvacious lets me update the image + audio with a keyboard shortcut, but I need to record the audio separately to copying the image for VNs with ames.
I'd argue that VNs can be more reliable, because there are a lot of anime without Japanese subtitles available, so you can't automate Anki card creation. I don't think the VN workflow is much more difficult to setup—Yomichan is definitely the most involved part of both workflows.
I agree. The only 'pure kanji' method I know is RTK. For it to be any use, you need to immediately start reading a lot for those kanji to stick after cramming them for 3 months. Otherwise, you'll just forget them, and it'll have been a big waste of time. Obviously, the key to any learning method is to be consistent over a long period of time, but it's especially true with RTK. You don't learn any Japanese from RTK; it's a priming method. Kanji are only useful in the context of words.