Tokyo Day 2 – The slow roll… a bit of Shinjuku, a bit of Akihabara

After taking about 12+ hours of sleep to recover, we woke up to begin our adventure..  one thing needs to be explained first. Since we will be spending our entire trip in and around Tokyo, I simply had a list of things to do.. nothing really super mapped out into an organized itinerary because honestly I was too stressed out prepping my carry on and check in bags/cramming Japanese phrases into my head/getting our portable wifi and flight details sorted/researching the area and culture that I gave up and decided we should just walk around and explore and have a loose list of things to see. –So leaving the hotel gave me a bit of anxiety since I just felt unprepared.

Tokyo's alleyways have sweet cats sleeping and feel 100x safer than alleyways in Toronto. I just don't do alleyways in Toronto actually. *shudder*

Tokyo’s alleyways have sweet cats sleeping and feel 100x safer than alleyways in Toronto. I just don’t do alleyways in Toronto actually. *shudder*

We made it out the door and decided to walk around Shinjuku where we’re staying and eat things that looked yummy, go into interesting stores, and explore interesting looking places. We realized quickly that while this is a good idea and we will continue to do this, we should prepare at least 2-3 things to see in an area beforehand if it turns out that we don’t find anything to do. The language barrier can be a bit intimidating, especially when it comes to figuring out which random buildings we should venture into. Let’s just say, it’s very hard to tell what’s PG here and what’s not because even the sketchy places have cute / colourful signage >.<

this was lunch!

This was lunch! Well, the plastic version that I pointed to

After eating breakfast at a restaurant that specialized in Hawaiian dishes, we decided why not jump on the subway and go to the nerd-centric Akihabara that we’ve heard so much about? so we did that.

Now, the subway…I… don’t know what to say. By some miracle we ended up in Akihabara and got back to Shinjuku, but we’re not sure how. I still am not sure how to navigate between the two different companies of subway and which lines belong to which…… I’m sure we’ll figure it out soon. No amount of Googling helped us. We ended up just getting on a train we thought was correct and waiting for the voice announcement in the train to say the station we wanted to go to was next, then we’d get off and follow the english on the signs. Spoiler alert: there’s isn’t much English on the signs.

Walking through side streets in Akhihabara. I'll get better at photography soon I promised.

Walking through side streets in Akihabara. I’ll get better at photography soon I promise.

After an entire 6-7 hours in Akihabara, we realized…. Akihabara is a bit hardcore for us. Unless we’re doing Akiba wrong, it feels like it’s ONLY for those who are interested in Anime (which I was more educated in anime)/retro games (wish I had any clue)/figurines (meh)/manga/general Otaku-ness… all of which aren’t really our thing or we just don’t know enough about. If you are into any of the above though, AKIHABARA IS THE PLACE FOR YOU. You will find walls of the stuff. We WERE pleasantly surprised by the amount of Magic cards we found though. We got some pretty great deals on cards that would be much more expensive in Toronto and there was a reallyyy good amount of English cards! Anyway.. if we are wrong about Akiba, please let me know… we were hoping to find more contemporary stuff/Nintendo (Pokemon/Animal Crossing) merch, umm and anything else we could recognize.

GIANT UNIQLO. I'll be back for you. Once I get over this jetlag.

GIANT UNIQLO. I’ll be back for you. Once I get over this jetlag.

In all, a pretty productive day but jetlag– which I had honestly never experienced before– hit me like a rock. We hit up Mister Donut, Muji, a conveyor belt sushi, McDonalds (yup, tastes the same as NA….), ate Japanese-Hawaiian food, bought a butt load of Magic cards, won some UFO machine prizes, gave vending machines a lot of our money, and got by with very little awkward social interaction. Woot. We learned a LOT about how to do this whole tourist in Tokyo thing today!!

Ok, Bedtime.

3 comments

  1. Renaud Bédard's avatar
    Renaud Bédard · October 13, 2015

    Me and MC definitely had a similar feeling in Akiba, thinking we either were not “doing it right” or it was just not for us. For collectors I can imagine it being paradise, to find stuff you can’t find anywhere else, but otherwise it felt very samey.
    Re: trains, check out the trains.jp app if you don’t have it already! Helped us a bunch and doesn’t require data. https://itunes.apple.com/ca/app/trains.jp/id344946340?mt=8

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  2. MC Bourdua (@mcbourdua)'s avatar
    MC Bourdua (@mcbourdua) · October 13, 2015

    Ahaha I was totally about to say the same thing as Renaud! One thing we did in Akiba though is a Maid Cafe. It was such a weird experience, but seriously, I will never forget it! 🙂

    Thanks for sharing that much about your trip! So happy to live that through you. Also, don’t worry we were not super organize either. A trick though, is to do one neighbourhood per day.

    And last thing, for a rainy day, I totally recommend the Aquarium in Ikebukuro. Japanese people are so respectful that they speak really quietly, that makes the experience of the aquarium so zen and calm, totally not the same as Ripley in Toronto!!

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  3. Johann☆Manzano★亡霊軍 (@johpan)'s avatar

    I agree with the Akihabara stuff. My biggest problem with going there is that all the stuff I want to but there wouldn’t fit in my luggage or I can just order and get shipped. I’m not as well versed with anime and not big on figures so I skipped out on all of the anime shops. I couldn’t buy PC parts or video games so I skipped those stores.

    What I did enjoy there were the arcades and all the latest updated bemani, you can’t bring that back home with you 😉 I know you’re not into AKB but the huge Don Quixote in Akihabara is kinda fun to shop in. It’s the 8F building about a block north of Akihabara station on Chuo Dori. Don Quixote is a chain department store that I really like shopping at. The 5th floor has the AKB Shop and a maid cafe I haven’t tried. The 6th floor is basically all Bemani and rhythm games (I played a lot of DDR when I was there) and the 7th floor is all fighting games and cabinets. the 8th floor is the AKB48 theatre which is only open when they have performances.

    Though, my favourite part of Akihabara is all of the tiny underground idol venues where some of my favourite idols perform at — places I’ve seen only in videos before that I actually got to visit was an experience I’ll never forget.

    Real talk though, if I wasn’t into idols and arcades, I wouldn’t really spend much time in Akihabara.

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