Pained4ever
Well-known Member
- Aug 26, 2023
- 4,156
- 2,732
It's fucked up how much hotter they are than thai or flip foids.
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that applies everywhereIt’s certainly your right to think so, but be mindful that Japanese girls may look very, very different from their pictures.
lmao whatYea maybe you'll think that if you're a shitskin dark eyed ethnic. Oh wait yeah you are one
you went? when?90% of girls in Japan are cute. It was crazy just looking around.
Like 6 months agoyou went? when?
i'm so jealous. Do you speak japanese? Did you get laid?Like 6 months ago
@Rance give tips on learning japanese
i had like 60 kanji at one point and could almost understand foids on hellotalk sometimes but it's basically all gone due to not trying to learn anymore but i will take your advice hereThe first 12 chapters of the Genki textbook and ~100 kanji are legitimately enough to start dating in Japan. It's really that easy.
- Learn hiragana and katakana before learning anything else. There is really no "best" way to do this and should only take a week or two. Flash cards are good.
- Watch TokiniAndy's Genki video lessons. They are easy to follow and fantastic quality:
- Get started on WaniKani. It is the Japanese equivalent of HanziHero (which is for Chinese). You get the first 100 or so kanji for free, and all the words that come alongside them. WaniKani and HanziHero are great applications because their free periods are free-free, no credit card, not some trial period bullshit. Set it to a very slow and casual pace so you don't get burned out.
I'd recommend joining a language exchange Discord server or something similar so you can ask questions ask you go along. You'll have a lot of little questions cropping up here and there. However, these days ChatGPT is also quite good for this. Do ask ChatGPT questions whenever you have them, even if they seem simple, because it might offer another way of looking at an otherwise confusing concept.
DO NOT bother with Duolingo, Rosetta Stone, or any other normie nonsense software.
estimate for how fast a low iqcel could learn that much?The first 12 chapters of the Genki textbook and ~100 kanji are legitimately enough to start dating in Japan. It's really that easy.
6 months if you study 30 minutes a dayestimate for how fast a low iqcel could learn that much?
it's legit all gone now. My brain is fucking friedI mean, starting and getting the motivation are the most difficult parts. If you've learned 60 kanji and understood some things on HT, you're already on the right path
how well could i get around day to day with that much?6 months if you study 30 minutes a day
Pretty well. It's not enough to understand most conversation, but it's enough for any conversation to be dumbed down to that level.how well could i get around day to day with that much?
hmmmmm. seems like being non-nt could be a major hurdle herePretty well. It's not enough to understand most conversation, but it's enough for any conversation to be dumbed down to that level.
- What they said (above your level): "I was delayed in going to work because the road was blocked, creating a detour that extended my commute by 15 minutes."
- Dumbed down version (your level): "I was late to work. The road was closed. Normally, going to work takes 30 minutes. Today, going to work took 45 minutes."
Maybe, although I'm not sure what you mean in this case.hmmmmm. seems like being non-nt could be a major hurdle here
what are ur thoughts on white women?I got obsessive with it and made a combined heatmap of all the phenotypes present in the East Asian region. Based on my subjective ratings. Looks like this:
View attachment 9851
So yeah, I guess I do find Japanese girls the most attractive.
The reason Hokkaido is bright green is because I forgot to account for Ainu. Should probably be the same color as the rest of Japan.
I wonder what this would look like if I did every phenotype on the globe...
Generally I like white women about the same as I like East Asian women.what are ur thoughts on white women?
I agree. I think white women have the highest potential for being attractive, but on average they're abt the same.Generally I like white women about the same as I like East Asian women.
When white women are beautiful they are very beautiful, but I think they tend to have more failos than East Asian women, such as oversized noses and square jaws.
There is also the issue of soft looksmaxxing and it's no secret that white women tend to be more obese, have poorer fashion sense, and be less "cute" overall.
i'd never make it in china even tho the women are hotI have a preference for EE (notably RUS and UKR) women, but it’s totally a personal preference. Would still take a Japanese instead of a European or US one any time of the day, both in terms of appearance and personality.
Chinese ones are also nice if you’re into anime as they tend to cosplay well.
No and yes but just nightlife shit - only there for a week for work shit sadly. Osaka next time.i'm so jealous. Do you speak japanese? Did you get laid?
What’s your job?No and yes but just nightlife shit - only there for a week for work shit sadly. Osaka next time.
I’m trying to assemble a stack and was kinda thinking about using only Migaku, considering they have a structured course. Is the addition of SuperChinese worth it? HanziHero def makes sense as an Anki alternative for grinding all them characters and building a foundationI'm using a combination of HanziHero, an app called SuperChinese, and a web browser tool called Migaku that allows me to "sentence mine" (to basically consume native content a lot more easily).
SuperChinese is worth it. Get the monthly subscription until you come across a yearly sale. They go REALLY cheap. I got a year for about $20-25 USD. It focuses on speaking and listening and will get you using grammar. SuperChinese is the backbone of my studies because grammar and building sentences is what allows you to actually communicate. HanziHero and Migaku are kind of the support soldiers of the learning stack. If you use a stack similar to what I use, you will find that your primary "textbook" (in this case SuperChinese) will introduce terms where you don't know the comprising hanzi. Just "eyeball" those and try to remember them lightly until you come across them in HanziHero, at which point you'll learn them solidly.I’m trying to assemble a stack and was kinda thinking about using only Migaku, considering they have a structured course. Is the addition of SuperChinese worth it? HanziHero def makes sense as an Anki alternative for grinding all them characters and building a foundation
interesting. do you think there might be some other, easier path to conversational language skill if you dont give slightest fuck about writing and reading?The first 12 chapters of the Genki textbook and ~100 kanji are legitimately enough to start dating in Japan. It's really that easy.
- Learn hiragana and katakana before learning anything else. There is really no "best" way to do this and should only take a week or two. Flash cards are good.
- Watch TokiniAndy's Genki video lessons. They are easy to follow and fantastic quality:
- Get started on WaniKani. It is the Japanese equivalent of HanziHero (which is for Chinese). You get the first 100 or so kanji for free, and all the words that come alongside them. WaniKani and HanziHero are great applications because their free periods are free-free, no credit card, not some trial period bullshit. Set it to a very slow and casual pace so you don't get burned out.
I'd recommend joining a language exchange Discord server or something similar so you can ask questions ask you go along. You'll have a lot of little questions cropping up here and there. However, these days ChatGPT is also quite good for this. Do ask ChatGPT questions whenever you have them, even if they seem simple, because it might offer another way of looking at an otherwise confusing concept.
DO NOT bother with Duolingo, Rosetta Stone, or any other normie nonsense software.
btw i'd love to see your detailed summary and comparison of japan and china you talked about some time agoSuperChinese is worth it. Get the monthly subscription until you come across a yearly sale. They go REALLY cheap. I got a year for about $20-25 USD. It focuses on speaking and listening and will get you using grammar. SuperChinese is the backbone of my studies because grammar and building sentences is what allows you to actually communicate. HanziHero and Migaku are kind of the support soldiers of the learning stack. If you use a stack similar to what I use, you will find that your primary "textbook" (in this case SuperChinese) will introduce terms where you don't know the comprising hanzi. Just "eyeball" those and try to remember them lightly until you come across them in HanziHero, at which point you'll learn them solidly.
Don't get the SuperChinese AI "CHAO" thing unless there's a huge sale. I don't think they have sales for CHAO though. It's pretty much just a GPT wrapper and while it's convenient to use it within the app, you can get the same effect by asking ChatGPT or DeepSeek.
The Migaku course is not very good and I'd recommend just using it for reading, sentence mining, and as an alternative to Anki for manually-added sentence flash cards. No harm in trying it out and seeing if it helps you though.
HanziHero is a must and they have a new dictionary feature that allows you to introduce cards for any term not covered in the course. You may want to use this feature for sex terms such as 精液 lol. Additionally, HanziHero allows you to "prioritize" words and hanzi. If you come across a term in SuperChinese that's very common but isn't introduced until later in HanziHero, you may want to fast-track that with the prioritization function. I'd recommend this for words like 商店 and 苹果.
This website is a great resource for deeper dives into individual grammar points: https://resources.allsetlearning.com/chinese/grammar/A1_grammar_points
For Japanese yes, for Chinese no.interesting. do you think there might be some other, easier path to conversational language skill if you dont give slightest fuck about writing and reading?
Is there something special about SuperChinese after looking into other platforms or is that just works for you? (We have identical goals afaik). It's a bit of a clusterfuck and I'm getting analysis paralysis with all of these damn apps - and fucking hell Hanzihero is a lot of cognitive overhead on the first day jumping in to these complicated mnemonics instead of just having an Anki deck lol.SuperChinese is worth it. Get the monthly subscription until you come across a yearly sale. They go REALLY cheap. I got a year for about $20-25 USD. It focuses on speaking and listening and will get you using grammar. SuperChinese is the backbone of my studies because grammar and building sentences is what allows you to actually communicate. HanziHero and Migaku are kind of the support soldiers of the learning stack. If you use a stack similar to what I use, you will find that your primary "textbook" (in this case SuperChinese) will introduce terms where you don't know the comprising hanzi. Just "eyeball" those and try to remember them lightly until you come across them in HanziHero, at which point you'll learn them solidly.
Don't get the SuperChinese AI "CHAO" thing unless there's a huge sale. I don't think they have sales for CHAO though. It's pretty much just a GPT wrapper and while it's convenient to use it within the app, you can get the same effect by asking ChatGPT or DeepSeek.
The Migaku course is not very good and I'd recommend just using it for reading, sentence mining, and as an alternative to Anki for manually-added sentence flash cards. No harm in trying it out and seeing if it helps you though.
HanziHero is a must and they have a new dictionary feature that allows you to introduce cards for any term not covered in the course. You may want to use this feature for sex terms such as 精液 lol. Additionally, HanziHero allows you to "prioritize" words and hanzi. If you come across a term in SuperChinese that's very common but isn't introduced until later in HanziHero, you may want to fast-track that with the prioritization function. I'd recommend this for words like 商店 and 苹果.
This website is a great resource for deeper dives into individual grammar points: https://resources.allsetlearning.com/chinese/grammar/A1_grammar_points
There is nothing especially unique about SuperChinese. I just went through a bunch of different "textbook" resources including A Course in Contemporary Chinese (was learning Traditional at first), Integrated Chinese, Hello Chinese, and finally SuperChinese. I found SuperChinese to be the most comprehensive and helped me learn faster than the others. Your mileage may vary.Is there something special about SuperChinese after looking into other platforms or is that just works for you? (We have identical goals afaik). It's a bit of a clusterfuck and I'm getting analysis paralysis with all of these damn apps - and fucking hell Hanzihero is a lot of cognitive overhead on the first day jumping in to these complicated mnemonics instead of just having an Anki deck lol.
Yes, I'd consider it more essential than in Japanese.I guess, in the case of Mandarin, with the 4-part memorization of meaning, tone, initial, and final, it favors having a dedicated character deck (or HanziHero in this case), whereas in Japanese I guess it's essential to see kanji in the context of whole words/within sentences due to the diferent readings... which is a bit more enjoyable lol, but still fucking hard, hence people usually recommending RTK (sometimes over WaniKani) but HanziHero here actually makes a bit more sense.
How are you deciding which words to mine and review as sentence cards on Migaku and which to just prioritize on HanziHero? Or maybe do both?There is nothing especially unique about SuperChinese. I just went through a bunch of different "textbook" resources including A Course in Contemporary Chinese (was learning Traditional at first), Integrated Chinese, Hello Chinese, and finally SuperChinese. I found SuperChinese to be the most comprehensive and helped me learn faster than the others. Your mileage may vary.
Even though I called Superchinese the "backbone" of my studies, I'd recommend getting a bit into HanziHero before jumping into a textbook. Having a small character set to begin with will take a lot of the cognitive load off.
Yes, I'd consider it more essential than in Japanese.
HanziHero will feel slow and meandering at first because it will cram a lot of sounds and components down your throat, which of course are not useful in isolation, and only useful in learning hanzi. Once you get a lot of those out of the way the hanzi and words will make up more of your cards.
Here are screenshots of my progress in September versus today. Note the ratio of characters/words to sounds/components -- it increases appreciably as time goes on.
View attachment 10163View attachment 10164
HanziHero words get prioritized if they fit one of two conditions:How are you deciding which words to mine and review as sentence cards on Migaku and which to just prioritize on HanziHero? Or maybe do both?
What’s your opinion on “Ni Hao, Kai-lan” for learning Chinese?HanziHero words get prioritized if they fit one of two conditions:
I don't really choose mined sentences in Migaku based on vocabulary, I save that for HH. I choose sentences in Migaku based on grammar patterns. So if I understand most or all of the words in a sentence but think, huh, I've never seen that expressed that way before, I'll save it as a mined card. For choosing the "word" for the sentence, I just choose the word that's the most complicated or that I'm least familiar with.
- I see them very often when reading (SuperChinese, Migaku) AND the hanzi in the word are not too far ahead (examples: 英国,天空,问题,开始). In other words, the term is so frequent that I leap ahead to hanzi I don't know.
- I see them occasionally when reading AND I already know all of the hanzi in the word. These often require using the dictionary feature because they're not in the HH curriculum for whatever reason. (examples: 饭店,说唱,机会). In other words, I already know the hanzi, so I take advantage of it.
Personally I'll be checking out what the hype was around My Little Pony/小马宝莉What’s your opinion on “Ni Hao, Kai-lan” for learning Chinese?
Peppa Pig is where is atPersonally I'll be checking out what the hype was around My Little Pony/小马宝莉
Yeah, I guess I'll be doing something to that effect; drilling alternate definitions and grammar points and such. It'll be amazing if one day we can quickly export sentence cards from Migaku (or even just some browser extension/mpv script designed to export to Anki or what have you) over to HH. There's an option in HH for your word reviews to be formatted as targeted sentence cards, but it's just a basic pre-provided sentence. Meanwhile in Migaku the additional context of a screenshot+the audio+the fact it was from media you consumed is pretty dope - I think using mnemonics all the way up will make my fucking head spin, and it's a bit annoying having to redundantly juggle both systems.I don't really choose mined sentences in Migaku based on vocabulary, I save that for HH. I choose sentences in Migaku based on grammar patterns. So if I understand most or all of the words in a sentence but think, huh, I've never seen that expressed that way before, I'll save it as a mined card. For choosing the "word" for the sentence, I just choose the word that's the most complicated or that I'm least familiar with.