Win Japanese Resources By Telling Us Your Favorites

It’s been about a month since we launched our “Japanese Resources Page” – on it we say things like “blah-didy-blah japanese resource this that etc” but we thought it would be fun for you guys if we just put our money where our mouths are. Not all the resources on the Japanese Resources page are free (some of them are, though, and they’re awesome), so we thought we’d give you some of the paid ones using cash from our very own Scrooge McDuck gold coin swimming pools (that way you don’t have to). We have a lot of cool resources to give away, too.

How To Win (It’s Suspiciously Easy)

On our Japanese Resources page, we have “recommend” buttons. They look like this:

The cool thing about these is that they’re linked to Facebook, meaning only real people can “recommend” something. Although individual items will get fewer votes by using Facebook (I’m guessing), the idea is that each “recommendation” will have a lot more umph behind it. Real people are recommending these resources, and I think people will be pickier about what they choose. That’s awesome, I think. You can really get an idea already what’s a great resource out there, just based off this (though some newer stuff has fewer recommendations).

We’re greedy fugus over here, though, so we want to bribe you to give some recommendations on this page (if you haven’t already). Here’s how to enter the contest.

  1. Make sure you have a Facebook account (big sorries if you don’t!)
  2. Go to the Japanese Resources page on Tofugu.
  3. Recommend one or more resources by hitting the “recommend” button. Pick your favorites! The ones you’d actually recommend to someone else for their awesome-ness.
  4. Come back here and leave a comment, telling us what you recommended and why. Be sure to add your email in the email field when doing your comment, that’s how we’ll contact you if you win something.
  5. Hope for the best. There are a couple different ways you can win something (and a bunch of prizes, see below), but we’ll start giving stuff out next week.

Quick, easy, and helps out both of us, I think (especially if you win something). More importantly, it will help others to find great Japanese resources, based off of your recommendations. You’re changing people’s minds! 0_0

Prizes

Out of our own linty pockets we’re providing prizes. Some of the prizes are ours, some are others – there’s a good mix of stuff going on, here, with different ways to win them, depending on what they are.

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What: TextFugu “Forever” Subscription
How:
We’ll pick one comment at random, below.

TextFugu is Tofugu’s online Japanese textbook. It’s made specifically for self-learners of Japanese (sorry classrooms, businesses, and the FBI) and tries to make sure you don’t hit any of the pitfalls of learning Japanese on your own (losing motivation, getting stuck, etc). We’ll be giving away one forever (lifetime!) subscription to one lucky (and hoopy) frood.

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What: Lifetime Subscription to MangoLanguages Japanese
How:
We’ll pick one comment at random, below.

Mango Languages is a great way to learning quick, practical Japanese really quickly. If you’re one of those people who don’t want to bother with all the fancy linguistic aspects of a language and just want to learn how to ask for directions, make small talk, or order at a restaurant, Mango Languages is for you.

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What: 1 Year Subscription to Lang-8′s Premium Program
How:
We’ll pick one comment at random, below.

Lang-8 is a social network that focuses on language exchange. You write journal entries in the language you’re learning (Japanese?) and then Japanese native speakers will correct your journal entries using a cool correction tool (that helps you learn from your mistakes). Normally Lang-8 is free, but there’s also a great Premium version of the site (I’m a subscriber, actually, it’s nice). We’ll be giving away a single one year subscription to one lucky winner.

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What: Forever Subscription To Gakuu
How:
We’ll pick someone at random out of people who mention in their comment that they’re intermediate / advanced!

Gakuu is a site that puts out regular lessons based off of real (raw) Japanese (we’re talking signs, letters, etc… things that are real Japanese used in reality in Japan). This service is more for intermediate / advanced students of Japanese, so we’ll try to pick someone who can use Gakuu effectively (so it doesn’t go to waste!).

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What: 1 Year Subscription to ReadTheKanji
How:
Recommend a kanji related resource and we’ll pick someone at random from that pool of people

ReadTheKanji is a really effective, interesting way to practice kanji. It uses vocab to show you different kanji, and based off your answers rates the individual kanji within the vocab to help you to study what you aren’t very good at. It’s a great tool for all levels! One lucky kanji-loving commenter will get a one year subscription to this service.

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What: Ultimate Nouns (1&2), Adjectives, and Verbs Vocab Packs
How:
One out of five recommenders/commenters will get this prize (those are pretty good odds)!

The “Ultimate Japanese Vocab” packs are some of the first things to appear in our (somewhat) secret Tofugu Store (shh, hasn’t been announced yet). These packs give you the 200 most common verbs, the 200 most common adjectives, and the first 200 most common nouns. By learning vocab in the right order, you’re making sure that you get the most bang for your Japanese-vocab-learning-buck, meaning you get to use the Japanese you learn a lot faster. These “packs” consist of an Anki deck and a pdf+excel file with all the words, their meanings, kanji verison, kana version, and so on.

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What: Ultimate Nouns #1 Pack
How:
“Recommend” something on the Japanese Resources Page then Comment. Everyone wins!

This is just the Ultimate Nouns Pack (not all four of the currently available ones). it consists of the 100 most common Japanese nouns, and is a great way to get started on your Japanese vocabulary. By learning these words you’re sure to learn the most useful words in the Japanese language. That’s pretty awesome. Everyone who does the Facebook Recommend on the Japanese Resources page and then comments here telling us your #1 recommendation on that list wins themselves a pack of Nouns (Anki deck + PDF/Excel file). Hooray for winning! Tiger Blood!

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Rules

There you have it. Odds are really good on some of these, not as good on others. There are some rules, though:

  1. You have to recommend something on the Japanese Resource Page first (that means you need a Facebook account to recommend with).
  2. We’ll only count one comment from each person, below (so don’t spam comments… we know your IP address! Be nice to others!)
  3. We’ll try to make sure one person doesn’t win more than one prize (besides the Ultimate Vocab packs, because everyone wins one of those, at least!).
  4. We’ll start giving things away a week from now. That’s August 8th. Probably won’t get everything out on that day, but expect to start hearing from us then (and the rest of that week). Make sure you put your email in correctly while leaving your comment, otherwise we won’t be able ot get ahold of you :(
  5. Comments that are particularly entertaining / well written / etc may or may not get two entries into the “random choosing pool.” Quality is king, ya’all.
  6. Also, tweeting / liking / G+ing this post may or may not also help you out. Probably won’t, but just sayin’, you know?

That’s it – get to it if you want to get to it! Let us know if you have any questions, too.


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  • B. Biscuit

    I personally liked Tae Kim’s Guide when I first started learning Japanese. I felt like everything was explained in a way that made sense. The examples he uses are totally random and give a little smirk every time I read them. Rikaichan is also extremely helpful. 

    (Intermediate Learner!!)

  • bduddy

    Wait… can you see our e-mails? Just to be sure, mine is bduddy55555@gmail.com

  • Scott Bates

    I recommend Japanese for busy people; it’s a great text book for starting out your Japanese adventure, the grammar is aimed at businesses but it helps improve spoken Japanese with the addition of a CD!
    Also Textfugu looks great!! It was worth a try :)

  • Anonymous

    I picked Denshi Jisho and Rikaichan. And the following are the reasons for each one:

    1. Denshi Jisho

    A web-based dictionary using JEdict which can save your life when you are studying with a textbook but need to know the writing form of a word or the usage in sentences while you’re in front of a computer – that is awesome – and it also has a mobile site.

    2. Rikaichan

    A little and light add-on for Firefox that definitely saves my life when I’m trying to read pages like Newtype and Dengeki ones (and often, a newspaper site). It shows to the user the word, and if you press a button (I think it’s ctrl) it also shows the kanji usage in names, places and info for that kanji alone (e.g. the number of the kanji in some books and dictionaries, radical info, meaning and frequency)

    And there’s a site which I started using some time ago, called “JLPT Study page” (http://www.jlptstudy.com) that is really useful if you’re trying to study for JLPT N5~N2 or just review vocabulary, particles and use of verbs.

  • Snapcasezx3

    I really like Japanese the Manga way.  My main motivation for learning Japanese is to read Manga in Japanese.  This book was made for me.  It directly gets me closer to my goal.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=38708642 Amani Pitts

    Totally recommended Textfugu after years of searching for a Japanese Learning source that suited by way of thinking

    Gakuu- although still a beginner I use this site to force myself into language immersion and translating parts of the articles for study

    And PLEASE people use all of the cheat sheets, they are so wonderful for my brain on the train and when I start to stumble on some of the very elementary things in my learning

    If my friends find this though I am so dead because they are tired of me talking about this great site and all the things I learn from using the multiple resources suggested, except the one friend I got addicted to using these resources to learn herself

  • AvidReader

    heyhey!- I recommended Lang-8, I found this site to be extremely helpful, and user friendly… basically I fell in love with the whole concept- honing skills in reading, writing and sentence structure. With this TRIFECTA of AWESOME! it becomes almost impossible to say no! The number one thing that sold me to recommend this was the fact that ANYONE can use it for ANY LANGUAGE! seriously, I used this for Spanish/ Japanese (of course ;D) my sister could use this for Mandarin, my brother for Italian or my friend with French… there really isnt a loosing side here! – and this is SO much better then any of those video-chat based website, that claim to be “language learning  based” – (lets face it… thing can get REAL AWKWARD.. REAL FAST over a web cam… O.o) 

  • Fishy Chips

    Let me also add, I have a small Oxford Mini Japanese Dictionary. ABSOLUTELY GREAT! All the Japanese are in… Japanese. Kanji with Kana Syllabary. There are explanations on many things that don’t translate right, and even a phrasebook and section on many different things. The only problem is sometimes looking up a word, its not there. That is usually meaning that it is a vulgarity, or you are looking up a word which is not British English. :P

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1557601331 Tanner Lambson

    I use Lang-8 every day (I mean, that’s sort of the point isn’t it…?). I really love the people aspect. It’s extremely useful for learning everyday Japanese. Like people speak. In real life. I recommend it for everyone. Beginners, intermediate, and advanced can all use it and reap it’s usefulness.

    I also recommended Textfugu. I don’t have an account, but I love the free portion. It’s already helping. Also…Denshi Jisho. It’s amazing. ‘Nuff said.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1557601331 Tanner Lambson

    Did I mention I’m an intermediate student…?

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1503326602 Michael Jap

    As beginner learner, I recommend:

    ++NihonShock’s Ultimate Japanese Cheat Sheet++
    It is very useful for beginner, because there are Hiragana & Katakana charts and  important “cautions” messages. Also, there is romaji version for people that not memorized hiragana yet.
    Actually I like this cheat sheet because it is include a lot things that important in just 2 pages.

    ++ TextFugu’s Hiragana Chart &  TextFugu’s Katakana Chart
    It is very clear charts. It is simple and includes dakuten and combos. It is beginner’s best friend.

    As beginner I really like cheat sheets rather than in computer, because it is printable and offline. Since there a lot temptation in computer that disturb my study. Cheat sheets have limited information but it is contain basic things which important.

    [michaeljap88@gmail.com]

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1503326602 Michael Jap

    As beginner learner, I recommend:

    ++NihonShock’s Ultimate Japanese Cheat Sheet++
    It is very useful for beginner, because there are Hiragana & Katakana charts and  important “cautions” messages. Also, there is romaji version for people that not memorized hiragana yet.
    Actually I like this cheat sheet because it is include a lot things that important in just 2 pages.

    ++ TextFugu’s Hiragana Chart &  TextFugu’s Katakana Chart
    It is very clear charts. It is simple and includes dakuten and combos. It is beginner’s best friend.

    As beginner I really like cheat sheets rather than in computer, because it is printable and offline. Since there a lot temptation in computer that disturb my study. Cheat sheets have limited information but it is contain basic things which important.

    [michaeljap88@gmail.com]

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1503326602 Michael Jap

    As beginner learner, I recommend:

    ++NihonShock’s Ultimate Japanese Cheat Sheet++
    It is very useful for beginner, because there are Hiragana & Katakana charts and  important “cautions” messages. Also, there is romaji version for people that not memorized hiragana yet.
    Actually I like this cheat sheet because it is include a lot things that important in just 2 pages.

    ++ TextFugu’s Hiragana Chart &  TextFugu’s Katakana Chart
    It is very clear charts. It is simple and includes dakuten and combos. It is beginner’s best friend.

    As beginner I really like cheat sheets rather than in computer, because it is printable and offline. Since there a lot temptation in computer that disturb my study. Cheat sheets have limited information but it is contain basic things which important.

    [michaeljap88@gmail.com]

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1503326602 Michael Jap

    As beginner learner, I recommend:

    ++NihonShock’s Ultimate Japanese Cheat Sheet++
    It is very useful for beginner, because there are Hiragana & Katakana charts and  important “cautions” messages. Also, there is romaji version for people that not memorized hiragana yet.
    Actually I like this cheat sheet because it is include a lot things that important in just 2 pages.

    ++ TextFugu’s Hiragana Chart &  TextFugu’s Katakana Chart
    It is very clear charts. It is simple and includes dakuten and combos. It is beginner’s best friend.

    As beginner I really like cheat sheets rather than in computer, because it is printable and offline. Since there a lot temptation in computer that disturb my study. Cheat sheets have limited information but it is contain basic things which important.

    [michaeljap88@gmail.com]

  • Richard Hebert

    Textfugu because it changed my life. May sound stupid, but after so many failed attempts at trying to study it was the first time that it ever actually has worked, now I am modeling the rest of my life around what I am learning.

    Anki, because it takes so much stress off of what to study on a daily review, makes the world of difference!

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1503326602 Michael Jap

    As beginner learner, I recommend:

    ++NihonShock’s Ultimate Japanese Cheat Sheet++
    It is very useful for beginner, because there are Hiragana & Katakana charts and  important “cautions” messages. Also, there is romaji version for people that not memorized hiragana yet.
    Actually I like this cheat sheet because it is include a lot things that important in just 2 pages.

    ++ TextFugu’s Hiragana Chart &  TextFugu’s Katakana Chart
    It is very clear charts. It is simple and includes dakuten and combos. It is beginner’s best friend.

    As beginner I really like cheat sheets rather than in computer, because it is printable and offline. Since there a lot temptation in computer that disturb my study. Cheat sheets have limited information but it is contain basic things which is important.

    [michaeljap88@gmail.com]

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1503326602 Michael Jap

    As beginner learner, I recommend:

    ++NihonShock’s Ultimate Japanese Cheat Sheet++
    It is very useful for beginner, because there are Hiragana & Katakana charts and  important “cautions” messages. Also, there is romaji version for people that not memorized hiragana yet.
    Actually I like this cheat sheet because it is include a lot things that important in just 2 pages.

    ++ TextFugu’s Hiragana Chart &  TextFugu’s Katakana Chart
    It is very clear charts. It is simple and includes dakuten and combos. It is beginner’s best friend.

    As beginner I really like cheat sheets rather than in computer, because it is printable and offline. Since there a lot temptation in computer that disturb my study. Cheat sheets have limited information but it is contain basic things which is important.

    [michaeljap88@gmail.com]

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1503326602 Michael Jap

    As beginner learner, I recommend:

    ++NihonShock’s Ultimate Japanese Cheat Sheet++
    It is very useful for beginner, because there are Hiragana & Katakana charts and  important “cautions” messages. Also, there is romaji version for people that not memorized hiragana yet.
    Actually I like this cheat sheet because it is include a lot things that important in just 2 pages.

    ++ TextFugu’s Hiragana Chart &  TextFugu’s Katakana Chart
    It is very clear charts. It is simple and includes dakuten and combos. It is beginner’s best friend.

    As beginner I really like cheat sheets rather than in computer, because it is printable and offline. Since there a lot temptation in computer that disturb my study. Cheat sheets have limited information but it is contain basic things which is important.

    [michaeljap88@gmail.com]

  • Jennifer H

    I recommended Remembering the Kanji, Anki, Jisho.org, and Rikaichan. 

    Remembering the Kanji and Anki have gotten me so far in my studies. Even though I’m at around an intermediate level, kanji has always been an issue for me, but with Heisig’s method I’ve been able to learn 1556 kanji within less than two months! Huge progress, I’d say :)

    Anki is also invaluable for not just remembering kanji, but for learning vocab words and helping reinforce grammar. I definitely plan on using this for a long time to come.

    I do have an electronic dictionary, but a lot of times, Jisho.org is just more convenient. Looking up words and searching for kanji with radicals is super easy. I also like how it lists what number a kanji is in Remembering the Kanji.

    Rikaichan is so helpful for browsing Japanese websites and looking up unknown vocab. It’s a lot faster and more convenient than copying and pasting words into another online dictionary.

  • Jennifer H

    I recommended Remembering the Kanji, Anki, Jisho.org, and Rikaichan. 

    Remembering the Kanji and Anki have gotten me so far in my studies. Even though I’m at around an intermediate level, kanji has always been an issue for me, but with Heisig’s method I’ve been able to learn 1556 kanji within less than two months! Huge progress, I’d say :)

    Anki is also invaluable for not just remembering kanji, but for learning vocab words and helping reinforce grammar. I definitely plan on using this for a long time to come.

    I do have an electronic dictionary, but a lot of times, Jisho.org is just more convenient. Looking up words and searching for kanji with radicals is super easy. I also like how it lists what number a kanji is in Remembering the Kanji.

    Rikaichan is so helpful for browsing Japanese websites and looking up unknown vocab. It’s a lot faster and more convenient than copying and pasting words into another online dictionary.

  • Jennifer H

    I recommended Remembering the Kanji, Anki, Jisho.org, and Rikaichan. 

    Remembering the Kanji and Anki have gotten me so far in my studies. Even though I’m at around an intermediate level, kanji has always been an issue for me, but with Heisig’s method I’ve been able to learn 1556 kanji within less than two months! Huge progress, I’d say :)

    Anki is also invaluable for not just remembering kanji, but for learning vocab words and helping reinforce grammar. I definitely plan on using this for a long time to come.

    I do have an electronic dictionary, but a lot of times, Jisho.org is just more convenient. Looking up words and searching for kanji with radicals is super easy. I also like how it lists what number a kanji is in Remembering the Kanji.

    Rikaichan is so helpful for browsing Japanese websites and looking up unknown vocab. It’s a lot faster and more convenient than copying and pasting words into another online dictionary.

  • Zac Citron

    Hey,

    I recommended Textfugu, Anki, RealKana, and I tried recommending Kodansha Kanji Learner’s

    Dictionary, but the damn button won’t work!

    Now for the juice:

    1) Textfugu: The hardest part about learning Japanese, for me and I think many others, is having a set path to follow. If someone throws a Kanji dictionary in your face, a Hiragana chart on the table and says “learn Japanese,” most people will freeze. The human mind likes to “follow directions” which Textfugu provides.

    Furthermore, since Textfugu already has a set path laid out for you, you can devote the mental energy that would have been required to build that path towards learning the damn language! Koichi makes sure you learn the important information first, as opposed to many standard approaches.

    Moreover, Textfugu is divided into highly manageable chunks. Most people, I believe, prefer smaller, digestable chunks rather than large amounts of information. This is why books have chapters and why Twitter is so popular. Quick, easy, and informative.

    Only have 5 minutes? That’s long enough to get through a paragraph or learning the next Kanji. Only have 2 minutes? Learn the next vocab word. Koichi manages to provide such divisible information that you can learn “how to count from 1 to 100,00″ or you can learn “1 to 10″ or you could learn “1″ or you could just learn about the numbers themselves. Totally up to you.

    There are even vocab packs with vocal pronunciation for your assistance almost every chapter, a hugely helpful addition to an already outstanding package. I can’t express with words how helpful hearing the words spoken is.

    The major con of Textfugu is that it is tailored for a beginner. I hesitate even writing this, as
    someone may use this reason as an excuse not to adopt Textfugu. It’s not a good reason at all. I simply mean that, if you are familiar with Japanese, Textfugu is probably not going to be the most helpful source you could use. For someone who has not begun Japanese or is fresh to it, stop making excuses. Textfugu is your gateway into the magical world of Japanese.

    I want to add that, Koichi’s quotes of inspiration are great. At first you may find them cheesy or you may gloss over them, but they are truly a learning aid. Read every quote and read every line of motivation — you never know what might click.

    2) Anki: Simply put, Anki is free and probably the best note-card program available.

    In case you are confused, or failed to see the awesome in my previous statement, I’ll go on a bit.

    Anki provides you with the ability to import cards created by others (and create them if I’m not mistaken) including the ones used in Textfugu. In fact, I would consider Anki “mandatory” for a Textfugu user.

    You can choose the rate at which you remember words. For instance, I am very familiar with the word “Tomodachi” (friend) because my brother and I have an inside joke about it. Thus, when the card comes up, I can select to review it either immediately, or at different time intervals. With my example, I could select to only review “Tomodachi” every 5 days, 6 months, etc. For words you have trouble with, you can select to review them immediately, or every day, every two days, etc.

    Note: You can absolutely review your cards early. Anki does not prevent you from doing so.

    The last squeeze of awesome comes from the sound. Notecards can have sound accompany them, like vocab words. This is a priceless feature for a language learner. You can learn a language all you want through text, but hearing it and speaking it is a different game. I cannot stress enough how helpful this is.

    The major con is that, for me at least, it took a bit of time to figure out the controls. On the positive side, I never actually looked them up — after feeling around for a while you’ll get them. It ain’t difficult, it’s just not completely obvious.

    3) RealKana: This is the slickest, cleanest way to drill your kana. Simply choose what characters you’re interested in drilling and it’ll spin them your way over and over until your hands fall off. It’s use is straight forward and narrow, but it does the job damn well.

    Furthermore, my favorite thing about RealKana is the iPhone application. At $2.99 (not a bad price) you get the full program on your phone.

    Why is this great? Because it means that whenever you have 30 seconds to spare you could pop open the app and crunch through some kana. Waiting in line at Chipotle for a burrito? Tear open RealKana and truck through that hiragana you’re struggling with.

    The convenience of having a flash-card drilling program at your finger tips whenever you have
    downtime is crazy awesome.

    4) Kodansha Kanji Learner’s Dictionary: As far as Kanji dictionaries go, I’m not too much of an
    expert. I have a few things to say about this product.

    First, it’s sleek and sexy. I would call it the most attractive piece of Japanese learning equipment available.

    Second, it has an interesting look-up system. Unfortunately, I rarely use it and I didn’t spend the time learning how to use it either. I tend to just look in the back index — which is organized
    fabulously.

    Third, there is an insane amount of information for every Kanji. Warning: This is highly
    intimidating for a beginner.

    Overall, this is a great piece of reference material. I wouldn’t recommend you sit down and crunch Kanji straight out of this book as you’ll be learning a bit too much. Koichi stresses the 80-20 rule (learn the 20% of information that gets you 80% of the way) and this book doesn’t make the 20% clear. It gives you all 100% of the information, leaving the deducing up to yourself.

    However, for a perfectionist, this book is fantastic. You’ll learn everything you need to know about Kanji. No stone of information left unturned.

    I hope this helps!

  • Chad

    Koichi, you should definitely make a tumblr

  • Anonymous

    I recommend at least trying Textfugu. I’m only a few lessons in, but so far (I’m a freebie user right now), I really love it. Textfugu really shows you how you can start learning Japanese, instead of pondering HOW to learn Japanese, you can actually START learning Japanese.

    I also recommend RealKana. I have no idea how I would practice identifying kana without this website. 

    (email: tyler.ivers@gmail.com)

  • Yusefkalam

    I recommended TextFugu because if you really wanna start learning the Japanese language, even if it’s from scratch, this is a good place to start. yusefkalam@gmail.com

  • Yusefkalam

    I also recommend real kana because I used it to learn hiragana within a quick two week period.

  • Chris Hawkins

    Anki! The only thing that could make reviewing easier would be if Anki could read your mind, The only thing that could make creating cards easier would be if I could remember the hot-key to switch keyboards.

    Of course, TextFugu is the most powerful Japanese learning resource in the world! No, the universe! Created by no other than the Almighty Learning God, Koichi!(*kiss, kiss, grovel*)Seriously, even though I have only scratched the surface, a.k.a. free lessons, I can say that TextFugu is possibly the best at keeping my Japanese learning experience structured, informative, and most importantly entertaining.

  • http://twitter.com/mao_sama yuuki kuran

    I recomended NihongoUp since its one of the few resources that ive used in that list, It has a ipod/iphone ver. which is helpful to learn japanese whaile travelling, waiting for the bus etc, I especially like this one because it has the kanji, grammar, hiragana & katakana revisions all packed into one cool app. 

    Another one that I constantly use and recomend is the Rikaichan web browser extension, I LOVE this. I also LOVE to browse japanese web pages and read a lot of japanese blogs. this has helped me mostly in my kanji studies. while reading blogs or web pages many kanji’s or words that i dont understand, RikaiChan helps a lot. 

    I also recomend Tofugu’s Japanese particles cheatsheet. this was introduced by my college japanese professor and this cheat sheet is simply AWESOME!!! it has helped me soo much in using the particles and understanding them. definitely a must for any japanese languange learning beginner. 

    email: hachiko.nana.komatsu@gmail.com

  • http://haleyandhope.deviantart.com/ Haley

    Here are my recommendations for eight of Tofugu’s Japanese Language Resources. I ended up writing a lot, because I am really obsessed with all of these and can’t help but gush about them to my friends, even if they don’t understand Japanese! XD;;;

    JAPANESE TEXTBOOKS:
    1. Textfugu
    Shortly after I was started learning Japanese as a n00b a bit over a year ago, I found Textfugu. It has videos, free content, and study resource links to lovingly guide newbies in the right direction. As I read each page of this virtual textbook, I felt a spark of inspiration from Koichi’s entertaining explanations, use of motivational quotes, and study tips. I became determined to slowly become as good as him (XD;; ). Unfortunately, I finished the free content long ago (and am now consider myself intermediate level), but at least there’s still Tofugu.

    2. Tae Kim’s Guide to Learning Japanese
    This website is extremely, mind-blowingly in-depth about explaining how to use Japanese grammar in a super simple way. It explains each concept without flowery linguistic wording and uses charts so you can clearly understand conjugations. Then, there are quizzes after each chapter so it’s solid in your mind and builds up from there. You can hover your mouse over the vocab for its kanji, and since they’re repeated so much, you’re bound to remember them. It definitely teaches the foundations of Japanese, *especially* if you take notes in a Word document.

    JAPANESE LANGUAGE LEARNING WEBSITES & SOFTWARE:
    3. Lang-8
    Somehow, correcting the errors in other people’s entries has never been so much fun. XD It’s interesting and valuable to get to see the perspective of what Japanese users think about their English studies, differences between Japan and America (if they’re writing about being abroad), and what each user as a person enjoys doing every day. Writing my own journal entries in Japanese improved my confidence about what I’ve learned so far and let me know what I need to improve at; it helps me sort out sentence structure in my head.

    4. Rikaichan
    Rikaichan is super helpful and fast to use. Just hover your mouse over Japanese text and it’ll highlight each word and give its possible definitions in a pop-up. It’s a lifesaver when you’re looking at Japanese blogs and might not know when one word starts and another begins.

    5. ReadTheKanji
    This site uses virtual “flashcards” with Japanese sentences to test your knowledge of hiragana, katakana, and/or kanji (depending on your settings). It’s a quick way to find out how skilled you are, especially if you keep getting just about every flashcard wrong (lol). As you master each kanji, it gets color-coated depending on how well you know it compared to other kanji in a giant table. It’s helpful to write out the sentence and then the answer (if you got it wrong) in a notebook to study for next time you return to ReadTheKanji.

    6. NihongoUp
    An in-depth online textbook with charts, dialogs, blogs about obscure Japanese culture, and audio for almost every example sentence (and that’s just beginning to mention what free accounts get). I had the privilege of trying out one month of their “Learn” package for the price of the “Review” one due to the owners’ generosity (they are very fast at replying for customer service). Subscribers get to play their review games and get bonus quizzes and cheat-sheets (to name a few of their services). They even hold quite a few different types of contests for expensive Japanese-learning swag.

    JAPANESE WORKSHEETS/CHEATSHEETS
    7. Tofugu’s Japanese Particles Cheatsheet
    A helpful reference sheet that explains the most common particles, has examples, and can be memorized quickly. It’s the perfect size to tape in the back of your “Nihongo notebook” that you read on the job when you should be working. ;D

    JAPANESE DICTIONARIES
    8. Denshi Jisho
    Denshi Jisho is my bff. There isn’t a day when I don’t use it to look up words. Even my sister, who can only read romaji uses it, because you can search or receive results in romaji or kana. When I’m challenging myself by trying to read Japanese manga and web comics, I use its “Kanji by radicals” feature to look up kanji I don’t know. You can even go from there and look up sentences and new vocabulary that contain said unknown kanji! It’s pretty much the “poor man’s electronic dictionary” if I do say so myself.

  • Gypsy

    I have just recently started self-learning after studying for four years in school. It was a hard transition, but with all the resources like Lang-8, LiveMocha, and Tofugu I have been able to get advise and help from others besides just my textbooks and dictionaries. It’s amazing how much an online community can help one grow! 

  • http://twitter.com/Forestofmagic Makoto Kikuchi

    I picked Textfugu. While I only have the monthly subscription for now, I like that it addresses the issue with the way native Japanese people learn Kanji. Instead of learning kanji that’s complicated to write, (yet easy to understand the meaning of) you start with ones that are bound to stick with you. This makes the whole process a lot less painful. (Email: scientiam.et.sapientiam@gmail.com)

  • wohdin

    Kotoba! – probably one of the best dictionary applications ever. Not just the best for phones, the best PERIOD. It’s so easy to use, and so feature rich, and is really well-maintained, and is pretty regularly being updated with new features. And – IT’S FREE. Seriously, if you own an iOS device and don’t have this, then why are you on this website?
    Anki – great new-age flashcard app that has an easily portable iOS version. It has a whole library of flashcard sets, not just for Japanese – but for a whole slew of subjects, not even limited to languages. Great for anyone who needs to study, well, anything, not just Japanese. But it’s definitely great for that too.
    Lang8 – it’s awesome to be able to be corrected on your Japanese by native Japanese speakers. As long as you can handle being corrected and can take constructive criticism, USE THIS SITE. Not only that, but you can feel good about helping others in the same way with their English.
    Forvo – I use this too, it’s a great tool for clarifying some of those Japanese word tone issues that may pop up from time to time, since virtually no Japanese resources actually teach them. I would have never figured out how to properly pronounce 雰囲気 if it weren’t for this site lol.

    Finally, one app that is NOT mentioned anywhere, and honestly in my opinion doesn’t get nearly enough recognition, is Wakan. It’s not that well known, probably because it’s not been maintained in a few years, but it’s still really feature rich and is a staple part of my Japanese learning. Basically it’s a Japanese text editor, that displays text in three sections per line: furigana, large-font Japanese text, and a “translation” (more specifically, the dictionary definition) beneath each word. Further, you can hover over any word or kanji and see more details about the dictionary entries. In terms of dictionary usage, you can lookup words and common set phrases both in English and Japanese romaji, and you can look up kanji with a great number of custom filters such as stroke count, radical composition and reading. You can even flag kanji and dictionary terms as learned. There are custom dictionaries available for names and places, scientific terminology, and even classical/Buddhist terms. It’s based on EDICT, but unfortunately it’s based on a really old version, meaning it’s not compatible with newer versions, so it’s a little outdated. Still, it’s got a whole lot of dictionary content. As a “bonus”, it also supports Mandarin Chinese with most of the same features.

    For it to be so poorly maintained and, at least with more modern versions of Windows, pretty buggy, it’s one of the most complete Japanese assistant programs I’ve ever used. I just wish it was still being developed.

  • Hinoema

    I want one of the prizes to be a subscription to that Japanese Candy of the Month Club. 

    Srsly, this is cool. I don’t have facebook, but good luck to those who do. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000079188103 Martin Krošlák

    I recommended several of resources mentioned there (as I use pretty much all of them).

    Tae Kim’s guide, because it explains grammar in very good way.
    Anki, simply because it’s awesome (it really helps if you’re like me and hate seeing those blue numbers saying how many cards are due today and want to go through them all :) ).
    RealKana helped me a lot back when I was just starting and didn’t know kana so well.
    I’m using Rikaichan a lot since I’m not so well versed in kanji yet, but I have  bad habit of just looking at the meaning, ignoring readings altogether. :(
    All the cheatsheets mentioned there are great (although I really don’t like the “cheat” part of their name  :) ).
    Denshi Jisho simply because it’s much more user friendly version of Jim Breen (imo at least).

  • Chris Dame

    This is an amazing resource, and I’m happy to say I’ve used most of them. You’ve definitely picked good ones. I’ve done some recommending, and am looking forward to at least the noun pack. Here’s hoping I win more!

  • Shannon

    Textfugu helped headstart my Japanese education before I start my minor in college.  And Anki is the best way to memorize things, for sure.

  • Kairi Izumi

    TextFugu: It’s really human, and guides you through everything without leaving you feel lost and overwhelmed. Koichi’s way of teaching Kanji really works wonderfully.
    Anki: Not a lot to be said about Anki. Sure, drilling isn’t fun, but it does work. 20 minutes reviewing on Anki a day really helps get that Kanji vocabulary into your head.
    Denshi Jisho: Again, not much to say (it’s a dictionary!). I found it especially useful in looking up Kanji characters that I hadn’t yet come across.

    (email: ibutsu@me.com)

  • Eleanor Chandler

    Japanese at uni, let’s start!

    It seemed like a chance to stand apart,

    But study after class seemed so baffling,

    Each stroke I forgot left a sting,

    The passion I once had did depart,

     

    But like a shining beacon Tofugu came,

    Bearing gifts to lift my game,

     

    The night before the essay was due,

    My friends at Lang8 knew what to do,

     

    Tofugu’s cheatsheet untangled the web

    Of those fuzzy particles は, がand へ、

     

    Denshi Jisho and Rikaichan created online
    ease,

    When unfamiliar words came to tease,

     

    But no connection was no complication,

    Kotoba was more than just translation,

     

    So, here’s to Koichi and the crew,

    Thanks for a great point of view,

    I’m proof you can recommit,

    Let’s all jfdi,

    (Next, I hope to try Textfugu! )

     

  • Eleanor Chandler

    Japanese at uni, let’s start!

    It seemed like a chance to stand apart,

    But study after class seemed so baffling,

    Each stroke I forgot left a sting,

    The passion I once had did depart,

     

    But like a shining beacon Tofugu came,

    Bearing gifts to lift my game,

     

    The night before the essay was due,

    My friends at Lang8 knew what to do,

     

    Tofugu’s cheatsheet untangled the web

    Of those fuzzy particles は, がand へ、

     

    Denshi Jisho and Rikaichan created online
    ease,

    When unfamiliar words came to tease,

     

    But no connection was no complication,

    Kotoba was more than just translation,

     

    So, here’s to Koichi and the crew,

    Thanks for a great point of view,

    I’m proof you can recommit,

    Let’s all jfdi,

    (Next, I hope to try Textfugu! )

     

  • Der Cuben

    I recommended Denshi Jisho and Remembering the Kanji because, between those two and Surusu, I’m having no problem getting through the Kanji at my own (admittedly slow) pace.  RTK especially is awesome!

  • tetsumikado

    Heisig’s Guide to Remebering the Kanji is the best!
    Definitely the fastest and best way to learn kanji, and is even better when used in combination with anki.  This wasn’t on the resources page (although it should be), but a site called “reviewing the kanji” is extremely helpful conquering difficult kanji in the Heisig method.

    Also love Tae Kim’s grammar guide…everything’s in there!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Tyrie-Adams/100000168055297 Tyrie Adams

    Haiku time!

    I recommend two
    Love Anki and Genki 1
    Great for learning stuff

    I used Genki 1 last semester in my Japanese class. It was very simple to use. Its even possible to teach yourself with this book. To help get the vocab down I used Smart.fm to study. I’d recommend that too but its not free anymore D: So now I use Anki. Not as great as Smart.fm, but it gets the job done for free ^_^

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Marion-Paz-Fuentes-Andrade/1346577234 Marion Paz Fuentes Andrade

    About Read the Kanji, I like how they designed this application. I was just surprise how easy and useful could be. In fact, I really learned (and remembered) those kanji I was study for. Enter to this website was like enter to Charlie and the chocolat factory: Colors for your strongest and weakest point, customizing about the quiz and the kanji pup-up to look about the reading form and specifical detail about the word.
    Just the best awesomeness kanji website.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Marion-Paz-Fuentes-Andrade/1346577234 Marion Paz Fuentes Andrade

    About Read the Kanji, I like how they designed this application. I was just surprise how easy and useful could be. In fact, I really learned (and remembered) those kanji I was study for. Enter to this website was like enter to Charlie and the chocolat factory: Colors for your strongest and weakest point, customizing about the quiz and the kanji pup-up to look about the reading form and specifical detail about the word.
    Just the best awesomeness kanji website.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Marion-Paz-Fuentes-Andrade/1346577234 Marion Paz Fuentes Andrade

    About Read the Kanji, I like how they designed this application. I was just surprise how easy and useful could be. In fact, I really learned (and remembered) those kanji I was study for. Enter to this website was like enter to Charlie and the chocolat factory: Colors for your strongest and weakest point, customizing about the quiz and the kanji pup-up to look about the reading form and specifical detail about the word.
    Just the best awesomeness kanji website.

  • foozlesprite

    Tae Kim’s Guide to Learning Japanese-This is a great resource and reference for grammar.  Particles, conjugations, examples…Tae Kim’s has it all!  There’s a caveat to this one though; you’ll need some basic vocabulary and kanji to get through it, as the examples include kanji.  I’d recommend using it with the second resource I recommended, which is…

    Denshi Jisho!  This is an AMAZING dictionary site, and also an amazing place to look up kanji you don’t know.  There’s a page where you can click on any radicals in the kanji, and it will pop up all kanji which contain the specified radicals.  Jisho has a gargantuan vocabulary repository, and each word can be broken down by kanji (very helpful if you use mnemonics).  There are example sentences galore, and you can even restrict your search to commonly used words only.  You can input English, kana, romaji, or kanji, which makes it perfect even if you don’t have an IME installed.

    Japanese the Manga Way-This isn’t a comprehensive grammar resource by any means, but what it covers, it covers very well.  It’s exciting to see a grammar primer using examples from manga and breaking it all down both literally and figuratively so you can get a glimpse at the inner workings of the language, and how to THINK in the language.  The variety of characters used is large, so you get examples of how all sorts of people might talk and use grammar.

    Anki-I have nothing to say but positive things.  I’ve used Anki about half a year now, and it lets you enter whatever you want, however you want it.  If you want pictures, audio, sound, video…it does it all.  The best thing about Anki is that there are many vocabulary lists already out there.  I currently use the old Smart.fm lists from before Smart.fm became a pay service.  Spaced repetition really helps reinforce vocabulary.  Just don’t cheat and say you know something when you don’t!

    Skritter-I learned about Skritter via Tofugu, and bought myself a $60 tablet to try the trial.  It was worth every penny, and it’s worth the $10-a-month fee as well (you don’t find many college students willing to shell out a subscription fee to ANYTHING, so listen to me here).  It’s the perfect solution for rote kanji memorization, that adds fun to the rote.  You can add kanji/vocabulary in any order you like, so it could even act as a replacement for Anki. 

    The muscle memory helps out, there are tons of mnemonics on the site already, and you can add your own definition and mnemonic for anything.  You can use it in your browser or on your smartphone (if you’re lucky enough to own one).  A note here…my vocabulary has picked up 10x speed since I started learning kanji.  You may think they’re too much trouble, but most kanji compounds make SO MUCH SENSE, and I can even guess the meaning and reading of compounds I’ve never seen before.  It’s a thrill to see a kanji that I recognize.  Kanji and vocabulary feed into each other so much that it’s insane.  If you’re not learning kanji, you’re missing out!

    RealKana-If you’re not quite to the kanji stage, RealKana is where to start.  Pick a row of 5 kana.  Drill them before you go to bed in RealKana.  Do 5 kana a day, and you’ll know them all in no time.  Even if you don’t know what a word means, it feels amazing when you start looking at Japanese text and understanding what those kana squiggles mean!

  • Heather Ringer

    i recommend itks nice, even though i have only done the free bits, so see a socially/culturally relevant text book. it adds comfort when learning when the writing being done is just lax. itks not nearly as rigid as when learning from a standard text book. plus itks ensuringthe quality and* quantity that you lean. .. lus what text book has a name as “text fugu” fo thewin.   …only thing  have to say i please get a more mobile friendly commenting system!.. it took 4 attempts of rewwriting this whole comment to get it to actually post. *cry(. also pardon the typos. obile wont let me go back and ediit. :(

  • Heather Ringer

    i recommend itks nice, even though i have only done the free bits, so see a socially/culturally relevant text book. it adds comfort when learning when the writing being done is just lax. itks not nearly as rigid as when learning from a standard text book. plus itks ensuringthe quality and* quantity that you lean. .. lus what text book has a name as “text fugu” fo thewin.   …only thing  have to say i please get a more mobile friendly commenting system!.. it took 4 attempts of rewwriting this whole comment to get it to actually post. *cry(. also pardon the typos. obile wont let me go back and ediit. :(

  • Anonymous

    First of all, I recommend “Textfugu” – along with Textfugu’s Hiragana & Katakana Charts – because that is where I began my Japanese studies. I am glad that was my starting point because it gave me a terrific foundation which completely opened me up to this beautiful and interesting language! I have recommended Textfugu to many people, specifically people who want to learn Japanese but haven’t started yet, and people who just began learning Japanese. 

    Next to that, I recommend “Tae Kim’s Guide to Learning Japanese”, specifically the “Grammar Guide” because this where I turned once I had finished all the Textfugu lessons available to me allowing me to continue to advance my Japanese much further. I continue to read Textfugu when a new lesson is available, but when I want to learn a new grammar I turn to Tae Kim. It has great explanations of very common and important grammar, but it also has explanations for pretty much every grammar point you will come across as well as lessons on slang which is necessary if you want to understand Japanese shows, movies, music, and if you want to communicate with and understand your future Japanese friends. 

    The next thing I would recommend is something I have been using since I began my studies, “Denshi Jisho”. I would not have gotten as far as am now without this Online Japanese Dictionary. One of my favourite things about this dictionary is that you can search up Kanji you don’t know anything about, and Kanji you can’t copy and paste, using Kanji Radicals. You don’t have to know any Kanji Radicals either because they have them all there for you. You just have to look at the Kanji and then select the pieces you can see. This is great for looking up Kanji from online Ads, pictures, videos and Kanji in print. 

    After that I recommend “Gakuu”. I have only been using Gakuu since the start of July, but I already love it. If you are Intermediate or Advanced and want to up your skills to the next level, or practice your skills, Gakuu is the place to go. It uses Native Content to teach you uncommon grammar, great vocabulary and slang. It gives you a taste of the things you will see everyday in Japan. Whenever I want to spice up my studies, challenge myself, or gauge my progress I turn to Native content, and with Gakuu they do a lot of the hard work for you. So all you have to do is learn and practice. And you will never feel lost, because if you have a question, all you have to do is ask in a comment or e-mail the ones behind Gakuu and your question will be answered. 

    The next resources I recommend are great supplements to your studies. I have used them to aid and expand the possibilities of my studies. These resources are Anki, Lang-8, and Rhinospike. The first SRS I used was Smart.fm and it was great, so I never had a need for Anki, But since it began going downhill I started using it less and less. And then it became a paid service. Once that happened I needed a new SRS and so I immediately took the plunge into Anki. I haven’t looked back since. I love Anki because it is easy to use. You can study decks other people have made or easily make your own, and it doesn’t take long to learn everything there is to know about Anki. I also love that you don’t have to connect to the internet to use it. Which means you have no excuse not to study. I have been using Lang-8 since I began Season 3 of Textfugu – about a year ago. It is great for getting feedback on your studies, and it has a terrific community. I have learned how to properly use many grammar points which I thought I was using correctly. So, even if your writing is amazing, you will probably learn something new by using Lang-8. Next is Rhinospike. Rhinospike is a fairly new resource which means it probably has  long way to go, but I already love Rhinospike and I think it an amazing addition to your resources no matter how premature it is. What I love about Rhinospike is the ability to download the recordings people have made for you. This is great for practicing your listening skills. I don’t think it is good for content you have made, unless you are pretty advanced, but it is terrific for getting recordings of native content – especially since it is fast, accurate and free! I use it to get recordings of Japanese news articles, which I then download and put on my music listening device. It is great for Shadowing!

    The last thing I recommend is “NihonShock’s Ultimate Japanese Cheat Sheet”. This is a great resource to have since it has an overview of very important grammar. So, you can use it if you need a refresher on some grammar or to give you a head start on grammar you don’t know so you can recognize that grammar and then find more in-depth explanations  on it – like in Tae Kim’s Japanese Grammar Guide. I like to use it to practice my Japanese while I am on the Train, at school, or just when I am away from my computer or any other Japanese resource. It is one page so it is very convenient!

    I hope these resources can help you as much as they help me!

  • Anonymous

    Sent you guys an e-mail with my E-mail address, since I used Disqus to comment.