This is the reordered version (see below) of the official KanjiDamage deck, the ultimate deck to learn Kanji with the
KanjiDamage method.
This deck contains all the data you can find on the website: mnemonics, jukugo, look alikes, images and so on. And with an added bonus: stroke order diagrams.
Note: THIS DECK DOESN'T FOLLOW THE ORIGINAL KANJI DAMAGE ORDER. This deck is reordered based on the frequency of each character (while still keeping the "dependencies" intact so that you will always learn 日 and 寺 before 時).
The upside is that you will learn a lot of useful characters much sooner. The downside is that you will have to memorise a lot more radicals towards the beginning.
If you'd like to follow the original order instead, check out my other deck:
https://ankiweb.net/shared/info/748570187
The deck is customizable. You can easily remove things you don't care about (like stroke order), or change what's shown on the cards (see "how to" section below).
By default, there are two types of cards:
- Reading cards show the kanji, and a jukugo (in kanji). I personally consider I got it right if I can remember the meaning, and either a kun reading or the reading of the jukugo.
- Writing cards show the meaning, and additional help: the onyomi, a kunyomi and a jukugo (in kana). I use the extra info to help me know which kanji we're talking about.
How to
Remove writing cards: in the Desktop app, click on the deck, then on the Browse button. In the search field, type "deck:current card:write" and press enter. Select all cards and click "Suspend".
Remove stroke order diagrams: from the Tools menu, choose "Manage Note Types...". Select KanjiDamage in the list, and click the "Fields.." button. Select "Stroke order" from the list, and click the "Delete" button. Optional: to delete the stroke order images from your computer, select "Check Media..." from the Tools menu. It should list a bunch of files with names like "e382aa.png". Click the "Delete Unused" button.
Revision history
- August 9 2015: update deck with latest data from the website. Rename deck to "official".
- Jan 22 2015: fix small issues in the data, added reading cards
- Nov 22 2014: initial upload
All the data comes directly from
kanjidamage.com. Stroke order data comes from the KanjiVG project
http://kanjivg.tagaini.net/ (CC Attribution-Share Alike) with help from Kanji Colorize
https://github.com/cayennes/kanji-colorize (Affero GPL). The deck also comes with the Noto Sans Japanese font (Apache License 2.0), to make sure the characters show correctly on Android.