What Starcraft Can Teach You About Learning Japanese

All three of us in the Tofugu office are moderately dangerously addicted to Starcraft 2. We tend to eat our lunches quickly so that we have time for a game or two during the day. Little did we know that we were in fact honing our non-Starcraft skills as well. In fact, we’ve been training ourselves to become better Japanese learners. Let me share with you how, below.

Mechanics Come First

If shortcut keys don’t come natural and clicking on those teensy tiny zerglings gives you trouble, then more advanced things like splitting marines to avoid banelings probably won’t be very effective. What I’m saying is, you have to start with the basics, get those extremely solid, and then move on to the harder stuff. When you do that, advanced concepts aren’t so hard anymore and you’ll be able to do them better in a pinch.

In Japanese, this means doing basic things like learning to read hiragana. It also means learning kanji radicals before learning kanji.  Basically, you have to put the time in if you want to do the fancier stuff; you can’t just skip straight up. If you don’t, the fancier things will just end up screwing you over (aka all your marines become a florescent green soup).

Picking The Counter

While I still adamantly believe that infestors are the counter to everything, those of you unlucky enough to not make lots of infestors have to actually think about what units to build. For example, you don’t want to build banshees when your opponent is going void rays. Instead, you should build marines (which also counter everything) or vikings or something more effective. If you don’t pick decent counters to what your enemy is throwing at you you’re going to have a much harder time winning the game. Sometimes this requires you to make a tech switch. Sometimes this requires you to build different units. Whatever it is, you need to be flexible.

In Japanese you have to do this as well. To counter the huge stack of vocab you need to learn, consider countering it with Anki. Need to counter imba kanji? Perhaps you should sign up for the WaniKani beta (wink wink nudge nudge). Everything in Japanese has at least one counter. Be smart about which counters you choose, though. If you pick incorrectly your mass void rays of Japanese learning will go down in flames.

Don’t Forget To Scout

Scouting is everything. If you don’t know what units the enemy is building, then you don’t know what to build to counter them. Also, if you see that they’re expanding, perhaps you can put on some early pressure or expand yourself. Basically, it allows you to react to various situations effectively. You know what’s coming and can therefore prepare for it.

In Japanese, it’s also good to scout. Take a look at the things that you’ll be learning in the near future so you can start thinking about how you want to tackle them. By staying ahead like this you can plan ahead. When you know a set of kanji is coming, you can set everything up beforehand so that the actual studying of it is EZPZ.

Rushing And All-Ins

Although I enjoy a 14-drone-in-base-hatch rush just as much as the next guy, rushing is an all in. If you pull it off, well, that’s great. You win. But if you screw it up there’s a lot of catching up to do (and usually you just end up losing in the end at the higher levels).

There are all-ins in Japanese as well. When done right, you can plow through a lot of material very quickly and come out on top. When done incorrectly, you can burn yourself out on Japanese and possibly lose the entire game. Just like an a rush in Starcraft, you might be able to get back into the game, but it will certainly be painful and slow going.

So, be smart about your rushes and all-ins. They can be effective, but they’re risky. Make sure your chances are good before attempting.

Upgrades = Advantage

In Starcraft I’m an upgrade fanatic. I’ll hit 3-3 cracklings before most people are at 2-2. I have to give up a little bit to get there, and it takes a bit of time, but once you’re ahead on upgrades everything seems nice and easy. Even siege tanks don’t stand a chance.

Starcraft upgrades, when very simplified, come down to attack, defense, and other. The attack and defense upgrades in Japanese are probably kanji and vocab. Other is, well, “other.” If you can get your kanji up to a high level, everything else will be easier. You’ll be able to read more Japanese which will help you with your grammar. It’s like engaging 1-1 marines with 3-3 cracklings.

The “other” category of upgrades are more specific. They’re more like learning a new grammar point. You’ll be able to use them throughout the rest of the game, and you’ll never lose them. They will only help in specific situations (depending on the upgrade), but they will certainly help if you pick and choose the right ones.

Spend some extra time upgrading your kanji and vocab. It may seem like wasted time right now, but it will keep you way ahead in the mid and late game.

Macro

While micro skills can be important, it’s your macro skills that wins a game of Starcraft, I think. Even if you lose a battle, if you’re pumping out more units than your opponent you’ll always at least have a chance to win.

In Japanese, it’s about the steady, daily progress. Studying Japanese consistently rather than building one big Protoss death ball then giving up after getting crushed by an infestor only army isn’t something that will sustain you to the late game. Sure, build the death ball, but make sure you’re also continually building new units as you move forward. You want to study every single day in order to get fluent, not just once in a while. So, macro your Japanese just like you macro those imba marines out of your reactor barracks.

As a marine would say: “By the numbers, boys!”

Expand Only When Appropriate

Expanding before a barracks / spawning pool / gateway can be risky, but it can be done. As long as you’re scouting, you can usually figure out when it’s appropriate to expand in a game. If you just guess and go for it, there can be dire results (if your opponent takes advantage of it, at least). Expanding takes extra minerals and time, which takes away from your army. Balancing the two is important so that you don’t lose the game due to your expansion.

In Japanese, expanding to another mineral patch is like starting a new chapter or new set of vocab. You’re going to have to expand at some point, that’s a given, but when you expand is up to you. You want to balance it out, though. If you expand too early, you’re risking an attack that could take you out completely (i.e. you’re juggling too many things and just can’t handle everything at once, causing you to quit learning Japanese). If you expand too late, then you’ve just wasted a bunch of time, slowing down your Japanese learning (possibly demotivating as well). You have to expand to new concepts and ideas somewhere in between… sometime when you’re just getting midway into your current items and need something fresh to keep moving forward. Play with this to figure out what works best for you.

Economy

When you run out of minerals, you’re screwed. You have to keep up a strong economy to defeat your opponent. Everyone knows this. That’s why you have to expand in order to stay in the game (unless you’re going for the all-in, of course).

In Japanese, your economy isn’t so much about minerals or gas, it’s more about will power and motivation. Think of it this way. Every time you study, you’re using up some will power and motivation. Different people have different ways to replenish their supply. Some people take a break. Some people do something completely different. Whatever it is, you have to make sure you keep replenishing it. More importantly, if you see that one source of minerals (motivation / will power) is running out, you must start expanding and find a new source. No single source will last you forever, so it’s important to always be looking for that next mineral patch.

Oh, and if you so happen to find a gold mineral patch of motivation and will power… well… ride that out as long as you can.

Choose Your Race

Obviously there are three distinct races to play in Starcraft 2. While it’s obvious that Zerg is the best, to each their own, I suppose. All three races play very differently, and they all can reach the end goal of winning. That being said, even though it’s good to learn about all three of them, it’s best to stick with one race and learn that one race really, really well. If you do that, you’ll get much better than if you try to learn all three to mediocrity.

In Japanese, there are several different “ways” or “methods” you can use to learn Japanese. They are also pretty distinct, but they will all get you to the end goal of fluency if you put enough effort into any of them. You have your TextFugu style or your Genki style. You have a number of other “races” for learning Japanese as well. If you’re going to learn Japanese, spend a little time playing with each of them. Then, when you figure out which one suits your playing learning style best, stick with that one and dive in deep. Learn the ins and outs and get great at it. While all styles have the possibility of making your Japanese better, you’ll eventually have to focus on one in order to become a pro.

Spawn More Overlords Comments

Are you a Japanese learning Starcraft nut as well? Please add a comment reactor to my article barracks and let me know about any other lose Starcraft-Japanese learning ties that I may have missed.

And, if you’ve never played Starcraft… I’m sorry. You should try it someday. It will help you learn Japanese… er… well… maybe not. Butter my biscuit?

  • KJ

    Brilliant… The entire 30 days book should be rereleased as: 30 Days of Becoming a Better Japanese Learner: Starcraft Edition. Great tips with great references. But Zerg!? Really!?

    Anyway I should pick up Starcraft 2, only ever played the first one really.

  • http://mkaito.github.com Michishige Kaito

    KABOOOM, baby!!

    The skills needed in an RTS are easy to apply all over the board. There’s a university out there using Starcraft 2 to teach resource management in economics. The mental agility and decission making you need to play an RTS also come in very handy out here in the sucky real life.

  • http://www.vietamins.com Viet

    Forget high school typing class. Replace it with SC2. It’ll bring the APM up in no time.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

     For the overmind, bro.

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    Man, I should have gone to THAT university :(

  • Willian Pestana

    Great post! I liked the “Picking The Counter” and “Upgrades = Advantage” topics.

    Until now, I never focused on learn “counters”. Though I can understand them (who can’t?), sometimes I don’t how to read it. So, I will create a deck on Anki only for counters. ^^ Will be fun!

    About the “upgrades”, I believe that keep learning Kanji it’s really important. I can see the results when I’m watching the NHK World Channel. Though I can’t pronounce/read every single Kanji with ease, just for the fact I know what it means, make me able to understand what’s happening.

    And being able to understand these things is the “gold mineral patch of motivation”. Well, at least for me… 

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    Mandatory in Korean high schools

  • トム ジェンセン

    Uhhhhhhhhhhhh….

  • ですこ

    Kanji rush, ケケケ!

    Personally, when I run low on moral, I just cast 気合, but I guess not everyone has SP回復, so… what? Completely different strategy game? Oh, *now* you tell me!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Kaylan-Walker/1222956655 Kaylan Walker

    Loved this post ^_^.. Now to go play some Starcraft 2  =D 

    Also noticed something. I’m not sure if it’s a mistake or if I just misread it but;
     ”If you pick incorrectly your mass void rays of Japanese learning will go down in flames.”
    Shouldn’t (Void Rays) there say Banshees?

    Didn’t double post.. Had a reactor.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Kaylan-Walker/1222956655 Kaylan Walker

    Loved this post ^_^.. Now to go play some Starcraft 2  =D 
    Also noticed something. I’m not sure if it’s a mistake or if I just misread it but;
     ”If you pick incorrectly your mass void rays of Japanese learning will go down in flames.”
    Shouldn’t (Void Rays) there say Banshees?

    Didn’t double post.. Had a reactor.

  • http://twitter.com/WackoMcGoose Kimura Okagawa

    I’m going to start learning Korean this fall (I promised the Korean teacher at my college I’d take her class). Should I also start playing Starcraft?

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    You’d have to get a Chinese/Taiwanese/Korean SC2 account for it to be any use in learning Korean, but those are apparently difficult to get because of laws restricting minors from playing games. I’m sure there are guides somewhere, but it’s hard :(

  • Gentlementleman

    Not sure if StarCraft Strategy Beginner Guide or really a Japanese Learning Strategy Guide.

  • Mescale

    I noticed that the fugu says Protoss is OP OP and Terran is OP OP, but I’ve never seen him say Zerg are OP OP, So I kinda assumed you guys were into Zergs. 

    I have to say I quit StarCraft as I get way too wound up, I get loads of adrenaline, I tried playing a game before cycling to school to get pumped for the ride and it wasn’t so much super effective as super dangerous.
    I really have way too much energy naturally so I really need a sedative rather than a stimulant. Don’t know if you noticed that :P

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    Yes.

  • Arashi

     No that’s a cool (and efficient) idea. You get a feel for managing something without the risk of losing all of your parent’s money.

  • kuyaChristian

    I never had typing class in high school =[, though I learned how to type in my own free time. I’m still slow though. 75 WPM. And I suck at RTS games so my WPM won’t translate much to APM =[
    Speaking of Korean high schools, some girls in Girls’ Generation play Starcraft. Man, I’m screwed.

  • kuyaChristian

    …and why is the default ‘no avatar’ image a picture of Koichifany?!

  • Kiriain

    My brother played lots of Starcraft, and sometimes I’d watch him play. But I’ve never actually played it myself. Though I do understand the references anyways.

  • Kiriain

     Because it is sexy and pretty.

  • http://www.vietamins.com Viet

    You better get crackin’ on your Starcraft 2. You’ll never woo a girl from GG if your Starcraft skills are weak.

  • kuyaChristian

     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ub44GFsxUdI
    Boxer and GG in one commercial. Man, I need you guys to teach me how to play SC

  • kuyaChristian

    And to add to that, one of the members [the leader, Taeyeon] likes Protoss. :O

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Why yes it is. Thank you.

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    ~☆SlayerSBoxer is so dreamy☆~

  • boxie

     Yes indeed.

  • boxie

    SOOO, is this supposed to make me more proficient at learning Japanese or just give me another reason to play SC?
    (Either way don’t care) Great Acrticle.

  • Susiep539

    To what extent was this article an excuse to play Starcraft and call it work?! :P

  • lil2nutty

    Hahaha, I love your analogies! They’re all strangely true to some extend. Don’t forget about APM. I guess in Japanese it would be KPM (Kanji Per Minute)? Oh, and lets not forget about replays. You have to study your replays in order to see your mistakes and learn how to improve. Also, you learn a lot more from your losses than your wins.

  • http://www.vietamins.com Viet

    This is all based on almost two years of research.

  • http://mkaito.github.com Michishige Kaito

     Acquaintance of mine took the course, said it was awesome. And they did in fact learn quite a bit. They didn’t really ladder all day long, but instead, the teacher made custom maps to focus on the right learning exercises. But hey, video games at school, man!

  • http://twitter.com/WackoMcGoose Kimura Okagawa

    Yeah, there was a thread somewhere on Japanese Level Up about playing Japanese/Korean versions of online games. The main roadblock (besides the language barrier) is that to register for almost anything online in Korea, you need a special, person-specific code (similar to a SSN).

    And even for Korean games that don’t require the code, as well as a lot of cool stuff in Japan, they still have ways of restricting access to domestic clients, usually by IP address range (can be spoofed via VPN or Tor, though the latter is crap for gaming) or by latency check (physically impossible to fake, at least not without some server-side Weird Network S**t that would probably earn you a VAC Ban at the least).

    Even some US-based games that allow players to make their own servers can be affected by this. More than once I’ve tried to connect to a TF2 Dodgeball server that based on the server name I assume was Korean, and I would get kicked within five seconds “for having a ping of >300ms”. (Compared to ~80ms average ping for connecting to a server within your own country)

  • Nope Avi

    That’s weird. (The default-image thing) Lemme try… *logs out of Twitter-Disqus connection* Huh. I thought the image was based on what you put in the email field for no-login comments…

  • http://twitter.com/WackoMcGoose Kimura

    What? That was supposed to be posted by “Kimura”… Apparently, Disqus no-login comments take whatever is before the @ of the email address and use that as the user handle.

    Maybe this isn’t the place for getting all meta… or maybe it is.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Yes.

  • Mescale

    Dude he’s a Terran scrub, how can you say that?

    And that advert is so misleading he only needs one key on his computer and thats M.

  • Mescale

    Oh thats what it is, I thought it was a Sasquatch or something. I been trying to figure that out for a while.

  • Mescale

    Yeah but are we looking at Kanji per Minutes or Effective Kanji per Minute. Its easy to spam Anki reviews and get a massive KPM rating but how many of those Kanji’s are useful. If you use EKPM you get a more accurate reading of the number of Kanji’s.

  • Gentlementleman

    What should I do? I am only a Warcraft player! 囧rz

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    Field studies are ongoing. We’ll be reporting our complete findings when our research is done.

  • Gigadros

    Live for the swarm!

  • jli

    I have to say, it’s hard to win with mass infestor vs archon zealot *cough cough*. And yes, MARINE IMBA. 

  • Dylan

    The real bummer is that SC is available in tons of languages but not Japanese. 

  • Jeremy

    Thanks Koichi! You’ve given me new insight to my next ‘wave’ of learning japanese, I sort of hit a wall awhile back . Much gratitude for taking the time to present these resources, makes it so much easier. Maybe we’ll meet on the battlefield sometime.
    and yes! replays are another excellent analogy