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Making your own cards is unavoidable at some schools (like mine), but definitely supplement with pre-made decks.
One thing that's helped me is that my mouse has programmable macros. I can make a cloze deletion and add to deck without having to click the small input boxes, radically cuts down on time.
1st year I made my own cards out of every lecture and did pretty well with this method. It is time consuming, but you will get good at it and do it faster. You will also learn to identify what is worth making into a card and what is not so you can cut down on the amount of cards. This is a skill and there is a learning curve, but in the end it is well worth it.
Now in 2nd year I'm doing a mix of about 50% self-made cards and 50% lightyear cards, and this is also working out. The most important thing with Anki is to just trust it and be consistent. It definitely pays off.
I’ve had pretty much the same experience but it’s not for everyone.
Anki is not user friendly and it takes time to learn and master. Knowing hotkeys, how to do screen shots, switching between tabs, etc. can all help and make things easier. If you want to become an Anki person, read the user manual, watch some YouTube videos, and learn to do screenshots. Download image occlusion and a premade deck (light year, Zanki, Bros).
How did you study for the content you learned for previous exams? Did you add cards to the deck you already made for the previous exams and study everything in that deck, new exam material and old, or did you make a new deck for each exam and then merge them? Thanks!
The problem the OP has is that h/she is most likely making every sentence of the powerpoint into an anki card. And that's unnecessary. I think one hurdle for me last year was that it took a while to start to realize which professors ask what kind of questions. But once you figure that out, when you go through a lecture to make anki cards, you'll have an idea of what's important and what's not. You don't want to memorize the entire lecture. You need to understand concepts and memorize bits and pieces. So if you can shift your focus into trying to read through the lecture and picking out the best bits, you'll be better off and you'll save a ton of time.
I second also using zanki but you might wanna wait until you get some sort of base first. Focus on figuring out your routine with classwork before adding in pre-made decks. A lot of times the pre-made decks have way more information than you need for your course exams .
Preach. I limit how many Anki cards I get to make per lecture to an arbitrary number; it's basically saved my life.