Who here is a Sony fanboy?
There's a lot of strong opinions and preferences here - my own included - but, imo, no one that crosses the line into fanboy-ism.
That's what I thought. I don't care one way or the other about M$, so whatever happens to them won't impact my game buying.
Damn the internet is full of assholes. I'm spoiled by this place.
I was on an arcade board looking for some help finding some colored tops for joysticks (I want to add colored ones to my TMNT cab ), and some asshat wants to correct me and tell me that "TMNT is supposed to have ball tops not bat tops".
Listen cock-holster, just because TMNT came with ball tops doesn't mean that I want those. I want the bat tops. That's why I asked for help finding bat tops. You don't have to be an uppity douche just because I'm not making this thing 100% original. It's not original right now. In fact, I think the cabinet is from NBA JAM or NFL Blitz.
Quit swinging your internet dick around and just answer my damn question.
Did you say all of that to him/her? I hope so.
To others here that are learning Japanese:
What do you use for learning Kanji? I'd like to work on improving my Japanese reading skills, and I'd like to learn kanji while learning more grammar and stuff without relying too heavily on kana.
For learning kanji, I recommend either Japanese For Everyone by Susumu Nagara or Remembering the Kanji by James W. Heisig. I have both and they both work in different ways.
JFE is a standard text book, but it gets rid of the training wheels very quickly. The first couple of times you see a new kanji character, it will have the furigana underneath it. After that, you're on your own. It's a great but tough way to get a character memorized if you're willing to put in the time.
RTK uses the author's personal mnemonics to memorize each character, stroke order, meaning, etc. It's still a bit of work, but not nearly as harrowing as JFE. If you're a flashcard user, then this book is perfect for making great flashcards.
I'm not sure if you're using a text book now, but for the sake of kanji I have a difficult time recommending Genki. Genki is awesome for vocab, grammar, sentence structure, etc. but they always have furigana.