Compare Learn Japanese To Survive! Kanji Combat - Flash Cards prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Sleepy Duck. Published by RIVER CROW STUDIO. Released on 8/1/2018. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Adventure, Indie, RPG, Strategy.

Eighty printable kanji flash cards delivered as image files inside your Steam directory. A low-friction offline study tool for players already grinding the base game.

My spreadsheet instinct kicked in the moment I realised this DLC is not a game feature, not an in-engine quiz mode, and not a piece of software you launch. It is a folder of printable image files that land in your local Steam directory after purchase, and that is the full scope of what you are getting. If you walked in expecting an interactive flash card system layered on top of Kanji Combat's RPG loop, reset those expectations immediately. What the pack actually delivers is 80 double-sided kanji cards covering the first set of characters introduced in the base game. Each card carries artwork lifted from the Kanji Combat visual style, so there is at least a thematic consistency with the JRPG you already own. You follow a printed instruction sheet, cut the cards out by hand, and then study them away from a screen. The analogue angle is the genuine pitch here. If you are the kind of learner who retains information better with a physical object in your hands rather than another multiple-choice prompt on a monitor, that is a real and defensible use case. The friction points are worth naming clearly, though. The files are buried in a subdirectory of your Kanji Combat installation folder, not surfaced through any Steam UI, so first-time users who are unfamiliar with navigating Steam's local file structure may spend a few confused minutes tracking them down. Beyond that, the card set only covers 80 of the 200-plus kanji taught across the full base game, meaning the coverage is partial by design. Serious students who want to drill the complete character set will hit that ceiling fast. It is also worth acknowledging what the broader community has noted about the base game itself: the kanji teaching methodology has been criticised for dumbing down on'yomi and kun'yomi explanations while simultaneously front-loading multiple readings per character, which can create confusion rather than clarity. These flash cards reflect that same curriculum, so whatever structural weaknesses exist in the base game's lessons carry through to the printed format. Who does this actually suit? A casual learner who is enjoying Kanji Combat at a relaxed pace, owns a printer, and wants a tactile complement to their screen sessions. It is a narrow target. If you are already using Anki, WaniKani, or any dedicated SRS tool, this pack offers nothing those platforms do not do better and digitally. The value case rests almost entirely on the print-and-cut workflow being something you specifically want over a free browser alternative. Diego, Scout Team

Learn Japanese To Survive! Kanji Combat - Flash Cards
AdventureIndieRPGStrategy

Learn Japanese To Survive! Kanji Combat - Flash Cards

Aug 1, 2018Sleepy DuckRIVER CROW STUDIO
GamerScout Says

Eighty printable kanji flash cards delivered as image files inside your Steam directory. A low-friction offline study tool for players already grinding the base game.

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About Learn Japanese To Survive! Kanji Combat - Flash Cards

My spreadsheet instinct kicked in the moment I realised this DLC is not a game feature, not an in-engine quiz mode, and not a piece of software you launch. It is a folder of printable image files that land in your local Steam directory after purchase, and that is the full scope of what you are getting. If you walked in expecting an interactive flash card system layered on top of Kanji Combat's RPG loop, reset those expectations immediately. What the pack actually delivers is 80 double-sided kanji cards covering the first set of characters introduced in the base game. Each card carries artwork lifted from the Kanji Combat visual style, so there is at least a thematic consistency with the JRPG you already own. You follow a printed instruction sheet, cut the cards out by hand, and then study them away from a screen. The analogue angle is the genuine pitch here. If you are the kind of learner who retains information better with a physical object in your hands rather than another multiple-choice prompt on a monitor, that is a real and defensible use case. The friction points are worth naming clearly, though. The files are buried in a subdirectory of your Kanji Combat installation folder, not surfaced through any Steam UI, so first-time users who are unfamiliar with navigating Steam's local file structure may spend a few confused minutes tracking them down. Beyond that, the card set only covers 80 of the 200-plus kanji taught across the full base game, meaning the coverage is partial by design. Serious students who want to drill the complete character set will hit that ceiling fast. It is also worth acknowledging what the broader community has noted about the base game itself: the kanji teaching methodology has been criticised for dumbing down on'yomi and kun'yomi explanations while simultaneously front-loading multiple readings per character, which can create confusion rather than clarity. These flash cards reflect that same curriculum, so whatever structural weaknesses exist in the base game's lessons carry through to the printed format. Who does this actually suit? A casual learner who is enjoying Kanji Combat at a relaxed pace, owns a printer, and wants a tactile complement to their screen sessions. It is a narrow target. If you are already using Anki, WaniKani, or any dedicated SRS tool, this pack offers nothing those platforms do not do better and digitally. The value case rests almost entirely on the print-and-cut workflow being something you specifically want over a free browser alternative. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayercloud-savestier:aaaDLCPrintable ContentEducational SupplementOffline StudyJapanese Language

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7/8/8.1/10 (32bit/64bit)
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
DirectX 9/OpenGL 4.1 capable GPU
Processor
Intel Core2 Duo or better

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Game Info

Developer
Sleepy Duck
Publisher
RIVER CROW STUDIO
Release Date
Aug 1, 2018

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Learn Japanese To Survive! Kanji Combat - Flash Cards is available on PC, Mac.

When was Learn Japanese To Survive! Kanji Combat - Flash Cards released?

Learn Japanese To Survive! Kanji Combat - Flash Cards was released on 1 August 2018.

Who developed Learn Japanese To Survive! Kanji Combat - Flash Cards?

Learn Japanese To Survive! Kanji Combat - Flash Cards was developed by Sleepy Duck and published by RIVER CROW STUDIO.