
Originally Posted by
brit
Stop watching that brain-rotting shit.
I'm finally starting on kanji. I'm start with WaniKani (beta, still free since I'm level 1) and Read Japanese Today by Len Walsh. WaniKani is like a really pretty (and somewhat costly) version of Heisig's Remembering The Kanji, but with a better order and made by a younger team. RJT is an interesting book. It's not an SRS system at all. Instead, it breaks down each of about 300 kanji into their origins to help you remember and more importantly understand why they look the way they do.
I have my brother in law's Genki1+6disks, and a coworker's Genki2, so I'll probably be going through those pretty soon as well.