User talk:YamatoTakeru

Hello YamatoTakeru, greetings and welcome to the Narutopedia! Thanks for your edit to the Talk:Sage of the Six Paths page.

We do hope that you will stay for a long time. Enjoy your stay as we work to become the best Naruto info site out there. BELIEVE IT!

If you're looking for something to do why not look over the Forums or more specifically Narutopedia Collaboration for a list of projects we're working on. And the Community portal has a lot of recent discussions and places to go listed on it.

Please leave a message on my talk page if I can help with anything! -- ShounenSuki (Talk) 20:21, 2010 November 26

Re: The sendai catastrophy Kishimoto is OK
Don't you worry about Kishimoto-sensei. It is highly doubtful he would have been anywhere near the worst-affected regions at the time of the earthquake. The earthquake and tsunami mostly affected the Tōhoku region in north–eastern Japan, whereas Kishimoto-sensei lives in Okayama prefecture in the south–west. Of course there isn't a single region in Japan that wasn't affected — the entire country moved by 2.5 metres — but this shouldn't have affected Kishimoto-sensei's hometown any more than a regular earthquake would have done. —ShounenSuki (talk 12:06, March 12, 2011 (UTC)

Yeah, I heard about the tsunami and the earthquake, too! God, I was so freaked out when I heard about that! I thought all of our dearly anime, manga, and video games creators were gone forever! I heard lost of people died in the place and the people in Japan are still in distress.

YamatoTakeru, in Kishimoto-sama's discussion page here on the Narutopedia, you said you sent him an e-mail? What is it? I want to contact Kishimoto-sama, too, to see if he's all right.

Rumors going around that he is dead, despite that I did research about the disaster in Japan. Okayama wasn't affected, according from what I read from this. Although, I heard Tokyo was part of in the diaster. I hope everything in Japan is going to be okay. The US is trying to help them, so that's good.-- Ninja Sheik  02:44, March 13, 2011 (UTC) Now is it clear to everybody that kishimoto maabo san is alive, and that he is not dead. I hate when pepole spread some idiocy from uncomfirmed sorces on the internet. So kishi is alive and end of story endo bicoso(short terarm of end because so)...YamatoTakeru (talk) 13:10, March 31, 2011 (UTC)

Re: Translation of chapter 536 spoiler
With requests like this, you'll often get a better response if you actually phrase your request like a question instead of like a demand. Please often helps too.

Any way, what do you need explained? Remember that spoilers like that are always somewhat vague and confusing. —ShounenSuki (talk 12:56, April 20, 2011 (UTC)


 * I don't use Google Translate or any other machine translator. As a professional translator, that would be like collaborating with the enemy ^^
 * Hiragana and katakana can be learnt in a matter of weeks by an adult. The Japanese themselves learn them as children and even they barely take a year. Kanji, on the other hand, are a lot more difficult and even learning the most-used ones will take years. Dedication, interest, and kanji dictionaries help a lot, though.
 * Naruto has never aired on TV in my country and it certainly wasn't the series that introduced me to anime. That honour is set aside for Digimon, which first aired in the early 2000s over here. Even Digimon wasn't the first anime I ever watched, though. It was merely the first I ever found interesting. Both Pokémon and Yu-Gi-Oh were on before Digimon.
 * I first learnt of Naruto in 2001, but never paid much attention to it until a few years later. Somewhere in 2003 I started watching the anime, but I soon switched to the manga when I heard Gaara had returned in the Sasuke Rescue arc. I stopped watching the anime completely after that abysmal arc with Raiga and Ranmaru.
 * Learning a language is hard and practically impossible without an actual teacher or, at the very least, contact with native speakers. I would never claim to have any level of true fluency, but I'm pretty good at it. My lack of a true teacher can be seen by my lack of speaking skills. Writing and reading I can do pretty well, though. Translation as well, or I would never have achieved my level of Internet fame for it.
 * Also, thank you for the compliment. I am quite attached to my little cow-pengy.
 * —ShounenSuki (talk 20:37, April 20, 2011 (UTC)