I learned most of my Japanese from watching anime and then watching real Japanese people like seiyuu (Japanese voice actors) translated clips for example. Anime can definitely help a lot if you watch a lot of it but watching real people will get you more grounded and prevent you from embarassing yourself by saying stuff like "RASENGAN" or "nANi?!" all dramatic in public (lookin at you Sora xD). Basically just absorb as much as you can from both anime and real Japanese speaking people, always treat what the real people are saying as a comparison so you can be like "oh so people don't usually say it like that." Also definitely memorize hiragana and katakana, that will help you a lot with being able to understand how to actually break down each part of what they are saying. I'm still working on my kanji and vocabulary, that is probably the most challenging part. Just saying though, this method is not a surefire way to become 100% fluent. If you want to be 100% fluent, definitely use a language learning site/app or something and learn from the ground up.
never thought i'd see myself in a clip what😭
@@numgetzz WWWWWW I RLY LIKED IT!!! i clipped it on my twitter literally like the day after or smth im so glad u asked him🙏
@@floroscoclips OMGG i saw, your rubesho clips literally flood my twt and make my days better thank you so much for your work🙏🙏
I learned most of my Japanese from watching anime and then watching real Japanese people like seiyuu (Japanese voice actors) translated clips for example. Anime can definitely help a lot if you watch a lot of it but watching real people will get you more grounded and prevent you from embarassing yourself by saying stuff like "RASENGAN" or "nANi?!" all dramatic in public (lookin at you Sora xD). Basically just absorb as much as you can from both anime and real Japanese speaking people, always treat what the real people are saying as a comparison so you can be like "oh so people don't usually say it like that." Also definitely memorize hiragana and katakana, that will help you a lot with being able to understand how to actually break down each part of what they are saying. I'm still working on my kanji and vocabulary, that is probably the most challenging part. Just saying though, this method is not a surefire way to become 100% fluent. If you want to be 100% fluent, definitely use a language learning site/app or something and learn from the ground up.
Not me practicing my listening by watching his streams 😃
why does he say his japanese is bad?
it's not really "usual" japanese, it's a lot of slang or very specific word so it's hard to learn just with that, that's what he meant i think