I finished Assimil Latin L22, Hindi L33, Teach Yourself Urdu Chapter 1, and Perfectionnement Allemand L5.
I'm still struggling more than I'd like with the Nastaliq script, so I switched all my Persian Anki cards to use it in the styling settings. I'm not worried about not being able to read Naskh since it's so ubiquitous online. I did the same thing years back when I had to get used to Kaiti Chinese font, although this switch is a bit more extreme. Nothing like jumping straight into the deep end!
While fooling around with font settings, I also switched all my German cards to use Fraktur, because that's another font I struggle reading comfortably!
Recently, my motivation has been highest for Hindi/Urdu. It's not at absolute beginner levels like Persian/Arabic/Latin, and I can feel intermediate in reach, so I've been pushing it pretty heavily and enjoying it but Urdu script cost me a lot of time that should pay off in long run.
My Japanese motivation has been rather low. I don't know why. I enjoy Japanese culture, but I guess the South Asian/Persian/Arabic world is even more exotic and interesting to me at the moment. The motivation will probably come back and that's why I maintain all my languages. I basically go through phases and I'm in it for the long haul. Last year, I nearly gave up Hindi and now I'm enjoying it again!
I've been enjoying Arabic, but it's such a hard language, and it's only a dabbling one, so progress has been slow and reviews have been hard, but I feel myself making a dent in the huge task. Someday it'll move to a primary language, likely once Persian and Hindustani are intermediate. It's the same case with Latin, but Latin is much more transparent than Arabic, obviously despite still having long way to go to reading literature. But I have faith in my long-term strategy and short daily practice so I will continue.
Given my background and hobbies, my top 5 languages will probably eventually be English (native), Chinese (use with family and most experience), German and French (tons of literature and language learning materials), and Japanese (media, Sino vocabulary base) in terms of fluency. The rest, who knows, but those 5 seem the easiest to integrate into my life at the moment with the other ones I'm studying representing relatively uncharted territory. We'll see how it turns out.