
Japanese
Japanese is spoken by around 125 million people, almost entirely in Japan but that hasn’t stopped it from becoming one of the most studied languages in the world. Anime, manga, video games, and a growing interest in Japanese culture have pushed it into language classrooms and Anki decks far beyond its borders.
Not an easy language, but a worthwhile one.
Japanese is not an easy language. The US Foreign Service Institute classifies it as a Category IV language (the hardest tier for English speakers) estimating roughly 2,200 classroom hours to reach professional proficiency. That’s nearly three times longer than Spanish or French. Three writing systems (hiragana, katakana, and kanji), a completely different sentence structure, and a formal register system called keigo all add genuine complexity.
But the difficulty is largely front-loaded. Once you get past the first few hundred hours, the grammar becomes more predictable, the vocabulary starts to compound, and native content (the real motivation for most learners) starts to crack open. The resources available today are better than they’ve ever been: structured SRS tools, graded readers, browser dictionary extensions, and an enormous online learner community make self-study more viable than learning any other Category IV language.
If you’re here because of anime, games, or a trip to Japan, that’s a completely legitimate starting point. Most serious Japanese learners started the same way. Our only request is that you try your best.
See all of our articles on Japanese
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How Long Does It Take to Finish Genki 1?
Wondering how long Genki 1 actually takes? Get a realistic timeline based on your daily study hours, not the optimistic estimates you’ve seen elsewhere.
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What to Do After Finishing Genki 2?
Finished Genki 2 and not sure what comes next? Here’s how to choose your next textbook, build reading fluency, and finally reach native content.
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What to Do After Finishing Genki 1?
Finished Genki 1 and not sure what’s next? Here’s the exact path forward: textbooks, kanji, and grammar SRS.
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Japanese Example
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