The app was most likely created by someone who is British, or from that neck of the woods. I have brought it to many of my Japanese friends and coworkers and they have said the same thing. I graduated with a degree in Japanese Studies, and have been living in Japan for 6+ years now, and I can tell you this app was clearly not doubled-checked by a Japanese person of any kind it seems. I would say 3/10 kanji have wrong stroke order.which to me says that even if I get every question/stroke order right, I would only get a 70% at best when taking an actual test that has correct stroke orders on it. The only problem is that whoever made this does NOT know proper stroke order with kanji. I bought this because the layout was super simple and it was very easy to use. Time travel through your learning history, and save a wallpaper image or animated video of your current progress. Track your learning streak and earn grace days as you study more. Visualize your unlocked kanji history or upcoming reviews on the graph. Or type in kanji readings to practice Japanese input. Multiple choice answers include commonly confused answers to help you catch your mistakes. Kanji Garden uses vocabulary words made of kanji you've already learned to test in context. Get tested on all the common readings for each kanji.
Kanji Garden teaches these characters together and tests you on their differences to ensure you know how to differentiate them from the start, saving a lot of pain down the road. There's also a heavy focus on easily confused kanji.
Now you know all three have the same on'yomi ケン (ken)! Plus it enables you to take advantage of phono-semantic components that give hints at what the character means, and what it sounds like: When you can break down a character into its components, even kanji with many strokes become easy to recognize. Kanji Garden is built on a simple idea: Learn all the components for a kanji first. This allows you to maintain progress for hundreds and even thousands of kanji at once, while maintaining a reasonable amount to study each day.
Kanji you forget will be reviewed more often, while enough correct reviews will fill up its progress ring-which means you won't review it again for a full year. Set a goal of how many kanji you'd like to learn each day, and using proven learning techniques like spaced repetition, the app creates a personalized study plan based on what memories you need to strengthen.
Whether you're learning your first kanji, or skip 2000 to start, it adapts to your ability level and time commitments. Kanji Garden is designed from the ground up for Japanese as a second language learners.