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Also, about next lesson.

I'm planning to give a guideline on what beginners should and shouldn't do when they learn kanji. I want to teach each kanji's meanings, readings, etc. too, but that's obviously impossible because of their sheer number.

So I'm thinking about assigning colors to kanji that will appear in subsequent lessons, so that beginners can prioritize. For example, green kanji (日) means it's very common, while red kanji (鰯) means it's very rare.
But by what criterion should I decide each kanji's rarity? Should I refer to some list? There are lists of kanji ordered by frequency of use everywhere, but the problem is, that seems to only limited to regular use. There are also some characters that are almost never used in everyday life but are among the most common in visual novels (i.e. 俺). So should I just base the decision on my own feelings?
What do you think? =\
np, I'm not native too. We need to proofread it before finishing it up anyway
Hello deer Ignis. =\

I must admit I was too lazy to do any proofreading. It's okay. Don't hold back when it comes to misspellings. I don't want any of those in any of my works either.
In fact, it might be too much to ask but if you see any more typos I don't mind that you help me fix them. =\

I'll try to think of an alternative of code system, or maybe rephrase that totally.

Also agree with you about the goal part. I was thinking about encouraging people that it's achievable with the right tool but maybe I exaggerated a bit.

About the screenshot part, you mean a list of those vocabs?