Kanji games psp
No fees or subscriptions and no strings attached! Select Region Select Region flag-icon-us flag-icon-eu flag-icon-jp. RAW 3. Naruto Shippuden - Ultimate Ninja Impact. Dragon Ball Z - Shin Budokai. Dragon Ball Z - Shin Budokai 2. Assassin's Creed - Bloodlines. Naruto Shippuden - Ultimate Ninja Heroes 3.
Monster Hunter Freedom Unite. Need For Speed - Most Wanted RAW Bleach - Heat The Soul 7. Mortal Kombat - Unchained. Ben 10 - Protector Of Earth. This is a feature in Nihongo that lets you choose to only study words that appear in a piece of text more than X number of times.
So, for example, you could decide to study only the words that appear three or more times in this section, to just study the most important words. To access the frequency filter, find the flashcard deck for the clipping, and tap on the i icon.
With this technique, you'll create a flashcard deck from a chapter of the script before you intend to play that part of the game, study vocabulary from it, and then play that section of the game. This technique lets you enjoy the game's story as it comes, since you should have the words you need to understand what you're playing. Just play the game, looking up words as-needed as you go along. You can do this in addition to or instead of pre-studying. Keep the clipping up on your phone so you can quickly tap on words to look them up, rather than trying to transcribe pixelated kanji soup.
This'll create a dictionary history deck in Nihongo, which you can use to study the words you looked up while you were playing. Using this strategy, when it comes time to actually study flashcards you'll have more context for the words, and better insight into what's worth studying.
Sometimes it can be nice to actually read through the chapter ahead of time as a clipping, and tap on words to look them up as you go. It takes longer, and is a little slower, but this way you'll be even more prepared to just enjoy the game when you're playing it, with the dialog solidly under your belt.
Sometimes, you just want to play. And that's fine too! Pick up whatever you pick up, but know that you always have a safety blanket if you need to go back and review something you didn't quite catch. Nihongo lets you attach pictures to dictionary entries and flashcards, and when you see that picture, it's going to take you right back to that situation and help solidify that word in your long-term memory.
Try it out. I find that having a specific scene of a specific game to attach a word to helps me tremendously when trying to recall its meaning. Be sure to check out my growing list of game scripts and submit any more you find!
And if you haven't already, learn more about Nihongo on our website , or download it from the App Store! Have your own strategies for studying from Japanese games or finding scripts? Let me know in the comments! Picking the Right Game The first thing you need to do is pick the right game. Things to consider when picking a game: How much dialog does this game have? Have you played this game before in your native language? Does the game use kanji, or is it hiragana-only? Is the game voice acted?
What difficulty level of Japanese is used in this game? Is there a script available online? Finding Scripts Online I'm starting to build up my own list of game scripts , but if you can't find the game you're looking for there, you'll need to do some hunting. If you really loved a PlayStation series in the mid-aughts, there was a good chance it had an entry on the PSP. And there was an even better chance that it was pretty good. If handheld gaming is what you're eyeing, take a look at our list of the best Nintendo Switch games.
See our Burnout Legends review. The first: It was really, really good! A unique puzzle game that takes cues from the mind-bending art of M. This intriguing story casts players as Danny, a young man with insomnia so bad it lands him in an institution. At the hospital, a psychiatrist uses a machine to take Danny inside his own mind, like Psychonauts--if Raz stuck one of those little doors on the back of his own head.
A decade and a half after release, Crush remains a smart and challenging puzzler that manages to tell an engaging story between brain-breaking levels. See our Crush review. Developed by Ready at Dawn, the studio that would go on to create PS4 title The Order: , Daxter gave the wisecracking Naughty Dog sidekick his own game to run, jump, and flyswat his way through.
See our Daxter review. A portable remake of one of the best tactics games of all time? Yes, please. The studio was an undersung hero for Sony in this era, and Ghost of Sparta is proof that the developer had serious chops. While the controls occasionally frustrate, Ghost of Sparta mostly does a great job of translating the button-mashing combos of the console entries to the scaled-down control scheme of the PSP.
And it does all that while providing a visually impressive for adventure with graphics roughly on par with the PS2. See our God of War: Ghost of Sparta review. Grand Theft Auto: Chinatown Wars is maybe most significant for bringing the old-school GTA gameplay to a generation of players whose first experience with the satirical open-world series began with 3.
While the PS2 trilogy opted for a third-person perspective that focused more on the human characters than the cars they used to get from A to B, Chinatown Wars resurrected the top-down perspective of the first two games in the series to entertaining results. And, if a historical RPG sounds a little dry, just know that this variation of Joan of Arc spends her time fighting orc armies. Colorful visuals, a catchy soundtrack, and widely varying levels and objectives made LocoRoco 2 a must-play platformer on PSP.