Thank you!
No previous experience with Japanese other than watching anime with subtitles.
Recently finished Genki I, almost level 20 as you can see, but I feel like I’ve been slacking still.
I use Anki, so whenever I get to a new chapter of Genki, I slowly start adding all the words into my Anki deck. Also with Wanikani, there are so many (some useless / uncommon) words that we learn, so I only had the ones I’ve heard, or think are useful to me, to my Anki deck.
But honestly, any pace you’re comfortable with, is good for you. You’ve heard it before, but it’s not a race. Do as much as can, and you’ll eventually reach your goal.
For reading / writing practice, I 100% recommend HelloTalk and Tandem. Both apps you can meet native speakers that are learning English, and you can learn so much. There is even voice and video calls.
I’m guessing the rate at which people finished Genki will be different for everybody. I see that @SleepyOne finished in the late 20’s, whereas I finished before I was even level 7. Granted, finishing Genki was probably much more of a struggle for me, since I didn’t have as much kanji knowledge or vocabulary as someone who was much further through WK. But I wanted to start writing Japanese sentences as soon as possible, albeit extremely simple.
There’s no right or wrong pace, just do what’s comfortable for you. As mentioned above by some of my esteemed colleagues, I would highly recommend HelloTalk as a supplement to practice reading/writing Japanese. Also, there are audio options on there as well to practice speaking/listening. Good luck!
And I am curious - am I the only one using TextFugu?
Actually I’ve started like 3 days ago, I am around the middle of Season 2 and I like it so far. It actually brings vocab and I am missing mnemonics from Koichi, but I like it in general.
I use it too! It’s definitely nice having the WaniKani discount after buying it (and the guaranteed EtoEto access once that’s a thing).
I don’t have discount ;( There was only monthly price to chose, no lifetime sub [*]
I gave up on SRS’ing vocab from Genki some time ago, since it was hindering my progress and that wasn’t really what I was trying to learn there (plus, I hate Anki). So now I just look up the words whenever I need to, and that’s enough for some of it to stick.
I intend to learn most vocab not taught in WK by reading anyway, so it’s not a big deal. I started reading NHK easy news at level 12 or 13, but most of the time that just bores me (not because it’s too easy, I’m just not that interested in the news), so now I’m reading a novel (時をかける少女). It’s fairly manageable.
I don’t remember exactly when I finished Genki I, but I’m currently at lesson 18, and since this semester at college just ended today, I’ll probably be able to study the rest in a month.
I’m currently on Chapter 5 in Genki, and I, too, have found the vocabulary to be a struggle. I’m using a Memrise course that has all the Genki I vocabulary to deal with it, although it’s quite slow. I’d recommend that you give it a shot; it’s pretty much Duolingo (short “lessons”, variety of ways to review) but with Genki I vocabulary.
Really? When you bought TextFugu it should’ve given you a half off subscription discount code. I pay 4.50 per month!
They give you a discount for monthly and yearly, but not for lifetime. The only discount for lifetime happens once a year during Christmas (and it’s not guaranteed to happen).
I didn’t get any discount - I paid 20 USD for monthly TextFugu and I didn’t see any discount offers for WaniKani.
I’ve contacted Koichi, will see if he can do anything about that 
Yeah, I’m basing what I said on stuff that I read in here. I actually didn’t buy TextFugu. I’m sure the problem will be solved after the team answers back 
Yeah. Genki is a bit strange because I feel like on a good day I could do a whole chapter (and the workbook exercises) which means that Genki 1 would be doable in 12 days in a rush. I have been trying to really absorb the content though. I tend to do a chapter, then re-read every chapter preceding it before proceeding onto the next chapter to really hammer the material into my mind.
That sure sounds like a lot of work… It could be better to just find something you want to read, it’s a guaranteed way to get used to the grammar. It’s no big deal even if you forget something because you’re likely to remember it after looking it up. I just read the lessons and do the exercises, and that’s usually enough to start reading.
It’s not too bad. I’m a pretty fast reader and it’s mostly to hammer in the grammar points. The chapters are pretty short too (probably 4-5 pages on average) so nothing compared to the reading I was use to in college. 
I do try to do readings, but I feel like I struggle with it quite a bit at this point. I think maybe midway through Genki 2 it may be a bit easier.
Well, if it works for you, then that’s fine. I remember feeling a bit lacking in grammar when I hadn’t yet finished Genki I, so I think it’ll become easier later.
I feel like it depends on one’s perspective. Understanding a grammar rule and being able to recall it and use it correctly when the need appears are two very different things. I used to study 10 pages/day of the Tae Kim’s guide (not an everyday thing though), I thought I was handling it pretty well and I eventually completely burned out. I had to start from the beginning because even though I was understanding stuff, I could barely apply them and felt lost.
For some reason, I felt the same way when I was using Tae Kim’s guide, but somehow I don’t have that problem with Genki. Maybe it was because there were no practice exercises.
Yeah, not having practice exercises is a big miss. I can’t complain though as the guide is entirely free 
Personally, I’m making a word file where I explain every grammar point to myself and where I write example sentences. That pretty much keeps what I learned fresh “forever”. Reviewing the pages is also very very quick. I do understand that not many people have this possibility, so I would highly suggest writing their own sentences to guarantee a healthier learning.
That’s good, explaining something to someone else always helps you learn it better. I guess it works even if you do it to yourself.