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My Japanese Coach

My Japanese Coach
MSRP: $29.99
Your Price: $29.99
Shipping: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: UBI Soft
Buy My Japanese Coach

Prices subject to change. Please verify price during checkout.
 

My Japanese Coach Features

Explore Japan as you learn Japanese from your own personal teacher, or sensei
Compare your pronunciation of the sounds unique to Japanese with native speakers
Learn and practice writing Japanese Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji characters using the DS stylus
Play 12 different types of mini-games that test your grasp of the structured lessons
Built-in dictionary and phrase book with over 12,000 words and hundreds of useful phrases
 

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Additional My Japanese Coach Information

Thanks to UbiSoft's My Japanese Coach for the Nintendo DS, you can carry a tutor in your pocket that lets you learn a new language in as little as 15 minutes a day. With plenty of entertaining lessons, loads of fun-to-play mini-games, and a host of helpful features, this unique language coach will have you not only speaking like a native in no time, but reading and writing like on as well!



Carry a tutor in your pocket with My Japanese Coach. Learn in Fun and Interactive Ways
My Japanese Coach is an installment in the My Coach series from UbiSoft series that teaches the basic pronunciations unique to the Japanese language. This convenient and easy-to-use tutor allows users to compare their pronunciation to that of native speakers via the Nintendo DS's microphone. It also lets you use the DS stylus to practice writing Japanese Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji characters.

My Japanese Coach takes you on a virtual tour of Japan while you're learning the language. Lesson plans take place in a wide array of Japanese locations, from the densest of population centers like Tokyo, to the idyllic Japanese country side. You actually get to explore Japan while you learn new vocabulary as you open each point of interest.

Learn From a Master
Meet Haruka, the in-game digital sensei, or teacher, that exists solely for the purpose of teaching you Japanese. After giving you a small placement-style test, Haruka will get you started working through the various stages of your lessons. Gaining mastery points by playing the various learning games allow you to clear each level. Once you master all the words given in a specific level, you move on to the next level.

As you work your way through over a 1,000 lessons, your language skills are constantly tested and sharpened by various mini games. My Japanese Coach includes 12 types of mini games, ranging from Flash Cards, in which you hear a word and have seconds to choose the correct English translation, to Bridge Builder, where you are required to string words together in the correct order to create a complete sentence. And with mini-games that add a clever twist to classic favorites--like Memory that forces you to match the same words in two different languages--you will be sure to have fun while you learn.

My Japanese Coach also features a built-in dictionary and phrase book that includes over 12,000 words and hundreds of useful everyday phrases.



Meet Haruka, the in-game digital sensei, or teacher.

Sharpen and test your language skills with mini games.

Use the DS stylus to practice writing Japanese characters.

 

What Customers Say About My Japanese Coach:

The games are nothing too exciting, but they do help me pace myself when I'm learning. Also, most of the games only work on vocabulary and kanji. They also help me keep words in mind by reusing the ones I've learned recently. One of the problems here, though, is that the definitions are very brief. I took most of my college's first course in Japanese, but I had to leave school 3/4 of the way in.

It's nice that it's portable, because you can pull it out anytime you need to remind yourself of something or just have some time to kill. For example, if you wanted to know if the word "kanzensaishokushugisha" for "vegan" was being used as an adjective or a noun, you could figure out that it was a person from the kanji "mono/sha" at the end.This game comes nowhere near to replacing a class or books. It is good for teaching you new vocabulary and kanji and helping you practice them. For one, you can't choose the words you want to learn or practice.

I got so sick of it throwing the easy and useless word "bonnetto" (bonnet) at me over and over. I took my book home, and I also bought this game as a for extra learning.I think it works pretty well as a supplement. Like rowing a boat. For example, the definition of the word "retsu" is "row". Also, the game doesn't always give you all the pronunciations. You can access all the words in the game through a Dictionary, which I find very useful.

Or a row of vegetables. Most of the lessons are clear, though a couple are a little confusing.This game does contain all of the everyday kanji you'll need to know for reading Japanese, which is a nice feature.

They do appear with the definitions, and that can help you work out a definition. I'd most recommend it to Japanese students who want to learn extra material.

It helps if you know some kanji. It doesn't cover as much grammar as a book, but it did have a few things that I didn't learn in class (though I probably would have learned these things later on).

What kind of row. However, you'll probably want to find a good book kanji website, too ([.].), because sometimes this game gets the stroke order just plain wrong.

They do have a couple of problems, though. The ones that do contain grammar are very limited, so if you want to work on certain grammar points, it's best to just go read that lesson again.

It tells you how to conjugate them but I still have no idea what base to use for which situation.I've come across some program glitches in the Bridge Builder exercises. I like My Japanese Coach. All in all, I feel this game is a good value for the money. It askes you to click on word blocks and drag them into the proper order but sometimes the slots that are supposed to receive the word blocks aren't active so it doesn't let you snap the words into place.I would have liked more games that let you practice writing kanji, especially after you've mastered the kana. It has fun learning exercises that help take some of the tedium out of drilling words and sentence structure. The Fading Characters minigame is a good way to practice writing kana.I just wish the program explained verb bases a little better.

I've read a great deal of comments about the game, I would like to say that My japanese Coach is simply a study tool/guide it is not meant for people to reach fluency but a simple tool to get beginners oriented with the japanese writing system, speach, and vocab. Trust me doing this will ensure you that you actually go practice the writing rather than just using the Ds game. I love that it includes grammar. My Japanese Coach is a great study tool for beginners and intermediate learners. It's the best tool i've ever used, it's worth the money especially if your serious about learning japanese. Also i see a few issues with the stroke order but remember this is a program it's not 100% flawless thats why you should use textbooks on hirgana, katakana, and kanji for learning the correct stroke order. Ganbatte.

So for those of you who are in this category i suggest you not buy it you should go to japan, you'll benefit more with a real world experience in order to enhance your skills rather than using a computer game. a great deal of other programs do not, they simply focus on memorization. I gave this game 5 stars because out of all the other programs i've used My Japanese Coach teaches GRAMMAR. If you have such experience my question is why buy the game in the first place. For intermediate level individuals this game should be more of a tool for retaining memory for the things you should already know.

I started studying japanese in college from the beginners levels to the intermediate level. Taking classes, hiring a tutor, joining a japanese club, or if you know some or can find some international japanese students to conversate with then those are all great tools to use as well along with the game. I understand the frustration of all the romaji but the game is encouraging you to learn outside the game, don't expect this game to do all the work for you. This game is not meant for people who've had 8 years or 6 years of training, know over 500 vocabulary, or is at an advanced level. but anyway this is a great tool, japanese is a hard language to learn but anyone can learn it with the right tools.

Anyway's I bought this game because in a short while I'm getting a couple of Japanese DS games off ebay. I'm already on Lesson 9. Hello I'm an autistic 21 year old adult gamer.This game is great. My Japanese Coach is really working well for me I'm learning a lot of Japanese which is really cool and awesome. Buy this game if you want to learn Japanese.Happy Gaming. See I've never taken a language before to study but I love educational learning games like this. What can say I still like learning stuff.

Aside from that each lesson is a small and easy step forward, reinforcing lessons I have with my teacher. Also invaluable is the speed that the japanese is spoken on the DS game, and the recording features. I ordered this program at the same time I hired a private tutor to teach me japanese language and calligpahy.

This game did start me on verb tenses before my teacher reached this point and she was pleasantly suprised. Over all I would highly recommend this as a first tool in learning Japanese. We were able to fly through a couple of lessons because of this little program.

While I, too, noticed a problem with stroke order recognition in the writing portion of the program, I over all found this program to be a nice accompaniment to my Japanese class. I really never play whack- a -mole or romanji word search. I would also recommend taking a Japanese language class at the same time.

My teacher is real strict on handwriting samples and so I am a little frustrated when the DS game disagrees with my more perfect writing sample. The games are fun, but like another reviewer I also favor the multiple choice,sentence structure game, memory game, and the writing game.

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