This may seem like an odd feature request, but hear me out :-)
I've come to the realization that my 手写 is atrocious. Not my ability to write accurately; Skritter has been amazing for character recognition and memory. But my actual handwriting--its shape, its proportions, the way it flows--is terrible. My characters look like a four-year-old's, as my wife would say.
One of the great things about Skritter is that you can speed along as fast as you are comfortable, and trust that the scrib recognition will react accordingly. This is great for doing a large number of reviews in a short amount of time. What it's not great for is your actual handwriting. You learn how Skritter character recognition works, and you meet it halfway. You write so that Skritter knows what your intentions are, fast. And this is exactly what it's designed to do. Skritter is not a calligraphy course.
This morning I tried something different. I opened a notebook, and tried writing every character that came up by hand, as well as by mouse (my tablet is out of commision at the moment). This was good in some ways. It felt oddly satisfying to write Chinese with a pencil again. I haven't done much of this, and since I'm living in China now, I'd best get comfortable writing by hand. The second thing I found, predictably, was that it was monotonous. Why must I also draw with the mouse what I just drew by hand? For characters I knew, the solution was obvious. If I knew the character, and could write it out by hand, then I hit Spacebar on the keyboard to skip to the next review. Problem solved. For characters I forgot, of course, this was impossible. Skritter currently has no way of grading a character without also writing it.
And at last we come to my feature request. What if you could assign a grade to an item without actually fulfilling the input requirements of that item? I guess I'm speaking primarily about character writing, though this could also apply to tones, reading, and definition. It means that you could 1) grade yourself immediately upon seeing a question, or 2) skip directly to the answer and grade yourself. For me the reasoning is this: The only way to improve your handwriting is to do a lot of it. And doubling your work is a drag, when a simpler solution is possible. Using Anki for separate handwriting practice is another possibility, but then I'd miss out on the great spaced-repetition Skritter already provides. And besides, Skritter knows me.
I should ask this first--Is this something anyone else would be interested in?