I'm not looking for a game that's purely focused on learning russian, i'd rather pick up a couple of words and focus on the subtitles.
I tried metro 2033 but there's some issues with that game.
I'm not looking for a game that's purely focused on learning russian, i'd rather pick up a couple of words and focus on the subtitles.
I tried metro 2033 but there's some issues with that game.
Save your time and better learn chinese or german.
I can teach you some russian, and its not google translate, well it is because I don't have a russian keyboard (Went to a russian speaking country for about 6 weeks so I learned quite alot of it.) (I know the curse words too xD)
All you need to know is nyet, comrade and vodka.
I don't know if GW2 has a Russian client, but if it does that would be an excellent choice. First, the options allow you to set audio and text languages differently. Second, you can change languages very quickly by pressing a hotkey, so you can switch between your first language and Russian to compare/translate without going into the menu or even restarting the game.
If it's there's no Russian client available (I believe not, a quick Google search didn't bring up any useful info) you might still want to track Arenanets progress on creating new clients. I don't know if they plan to add more clients either, but it would really be an amazing tool to learn a new language!
Edit: I know for sure that WoW has a Russian client, so that would be an option. Sadly, the language settings/technical implementation isn't as good as in GW2.
Last edited by reckoner04; 2012-10-10 at 07:18 PM.
Al'right, i'll try one of the Stalker series. (but isn't that Ukrainian? or is it similiar to russian?)
I know: Da, nyet and i'm not sure about this but ''das vee danye'' (it's either good luck or good bye) I learned that from Red Alert.
I don't think playing games is actually the best way to learn a foregin language. I took a 3 year (I think it was 3) course to learn English in addition to school program.
Also, comparing localized text/audio in Russian to the original version is a very unreliable thing too. Remember, that often localization is quite different from straight translation. And while it may not be a bad thing on its own, it's definitely not gonna help you understand the meaning of certain words etc.
If you really do want to somehow tie games to learning a language, and don't want to spend money on additional education, I'd say your best try is not playing games in the said language, but discussing the games you like with people who speak that language.
On a related note, there was that interesting website, where users who are interested in learning languages help each other. Like, when you register there, you select your native language and the languages you want to learn. And after that on your profile homepage you'll get a feed of other people's messages in languages that might interest you. You're welcomed to correct and comment on these posts. It's like a blog or something similar, but unfortunately I forgot how this site was called.
That's why you need me.... Need someone to punish you for your sins.
Playing games isn't really how you'd want to learn Russian, no more than watching cartoons would be an ideal way to learn Japanese.
First off, Russian uses Cyrillic characters, and if you were wanting to go to Russia or talk to a Russian in their native language (or in this case, read/write), you wouldn't get far without knowing what those Cyrillic characters mean.
Second, dialogue in games is going to consist of pre-recorded lines, and if they were lines originally written in a different language, they may not translate into anything that wouldn't make you sound like some kind of mentally challenged robot.
By far the best means of learning a language is immersion, or failing that, actually learning to talk and read the language like a child would. Obviously this means the best possible way would be to find someone to tutor you, but that might not be an option. I've heard the Rosetta Stone software is pretty great for teaching at least basic fluency in most languages, though it's kind of pricey.
Hah. I had to learn Russian in school as it was mandatory course for every GDR citizen. Still very rusty, I still can read and hand-write it though.
Anyways, games are not a good place for learning that. It's not a hard language though.
WoW: Crowcloak (Druid) & Neesheya (Paladin) @ Sylvanas EU (/ˈkaZHo͞oəl/) | GW2: Siqqa (Asura Engineer) @ Piken Square EU
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