Conversation starters
Interviews, favorite food, hobbies, weekends, movies, and simple follow-up questions.
YouTube curriculum map
VR Nihongo's recent YouTube lessons are not random uploads. They form a practical map of speaking missions, movement tasks, pop-culture input, and real-audio listening practice.
Topic families
The topics below show why YouTube matters as more than a video shelf: it previews Moe's classroom logic, gives free trust, and helps learners choose a paid path later.
Interviews, favorite food, hobbies, weekends, movies, and simple follow-up questions.
Driving, turning, stopping, reading signs, choosing routes, and describing spatial movement.
Camping plans, teacher roleplay, classroom explanations, and checking whether someone understands.
Game vocabulary, anime shadowing, manga reading, reactions, predictions, and natural expressions.
Cute news, keywords, context, meaning, and listening practice that keeps the playful class frame.
Genki support, beginner scaffolds, intermediate practice, livestream archives, and class notes.
Recent verified topics
This is a structured sample from the recent RSS-visible archive. Regional repeats are grouped when the same theme appears for different class time zones.
Question chains for hobbies, food, place, weekends, movies, and keeping a simple exchange moving.
Embodied route language: go straight, turn, stop, look, read signs, and guide someone through a place.
Outdoor roleplay for plans, locations, preferences, reasons, objects, and simple collaborative decisions.
Role reversal practice for explaining, checking understanding, giving examples, and reacting like a teacher.
Game-based repetition for objects, predictions, reactions, size, order, and simple cause-effect phrases.
Preference language for food, likes, dislikes, reasons, and personal details that make conversation easier.
Real-audio listening practice for keywords, context, meaning, and turning what learners heard into clear output.
Source note
This page uses the public VR Nihongo YouTube RSS snapshot checked on 2026-07-01 JST, plus the existing research inventory. The channel contains hundreds of videos, so this page is designed as a maintainable topic map rather than a full historical catalog.