1 (edited by SpitefulMurkrow 2014-03-22 22:16:53)

Topic: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

Hello everyone, I've decided to keep a log of my misadventures going out and about the Land of the Rising Sun. Unfortunately, it's not all for fun and games... But it's partly for fun and games, so it probably merits talking about anyways... Maybe.

Anyhow, I will be aiming to give a brief recap of things that I've encountered since my last update, coupled with little things I encountered, and pictures.

Oh, since I'll also be buying things, I'll be maintaining this little stub at the bottom too:

# of Streetpasses:
* 0

Yen Left:
* ¥50000

Item(s) GET:

2

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

Greetings from the center of the universe, everyone. Not a whole lot has happened so far, mostly just taking a flight, being less productive than I probably should have for a coding project and getting distracted with the in-flight entertainment console and SM64DS. Out here in Japan things seem to be superficially high-tech, kinda cramped, and marked by a faint whiff of cigarette smoke. So basically a shinier version of my stints in Taiwan, with more Good Burger moments. Alas, I will be nodding off for sleep here, it's just past midnight.

Picture Time!:
* Behold my underwhelming gallery of phone pictures. There's not that much interesting about them beyond showing a few quirks of Japan Airlines and general life in Japan, which depending upon what you're into, might actually be somewhat interesting.

# of Streetpasses:
* 6

Yen Left:
* ¥50000

Item(s) GET:
* Jet Lag

3

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

Commentary:

  • 1-2: Wait, is that manga on the entertainment console?

  • 3: DS gets a callout on the prohibition list?

  • 11-13: Airport architecture is the same everywhere, I guess. Except Kailua-Kona.

  • 14: Are the staff wearing filter masks..?

  • 15: They know their tourists. :P

  • 16: That design scares me somehow. Looks remarkably clean though.

  • 19: Hotel?

  • 21: Is that a wireless charging station?

  • 23: Don't see 2-prong plugs much anymore, but still, little familiar comforts are nice.

Sanity is precious; use it sparingly.

4

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

>Item GET
>Jet Lag

Tracer adds the Jet Lag to the
KEY ITEMS pocket!


Good to know you arrived there safe and sound, Tracer. Hope you can take some interesting pictures of yourself with your face cut or obscured by miscellaneous objects and events.

Thou hast forgotten the face of thy Lord. Remember, mortal, and fear pet me.

5

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

Archen used Hit And Run! wrote:

(08:28:06 PM) Archen: Here, but about to head out for morning.
(08:30:19 PM) Archen: re Thread Questions:
(08:30:22 PM) Archen: 1-2: Yes.
(08:30:27 PM) Archen: 3: 3DS, actually
(08:30:37 PM) tangent128: (morning!)
(08:31:04 PM) Archen: 11-13: Modern airport architecture, I guess. DIA is still one ugly agglomeration of buildings
(08:31:21 PM) tangent128: (Kona's lovely though :P)
(08:31:41 PM) Archen: 14: Yeah. Filter masks seem to be one of those "occasional" things. Must be due to a higher focus on hygiene + all the pollution blown in from the Asian mainland.
(08:32:33 PM) Archen: 15: Yeah, it's an interesting dichotomy. A lot of the tourist material is geared to people in their 20s and younger, but the population is biased towards the other end of the age spectrum.
(08:33:15 PM) Archen: 16: It should scare you. That's a bidet toilet. :P (They're easy enough to manipulate, just don't push buttons randomly.)
(08:33:22 PM) tangent128: yikes!
(08:34:01 PM) Archen: 19: Yes.
(08:34:12 PM) Archen: 21: Nope. It's actually a bit different.
(08:34:40 PM) Archen: You know how subways / mass transit usually maintain a card that you can use to auto-pay fares?
(08:34:48 PM) tangent128: Oh, THAT kind of charge.
(08:35:20 PM) Archen:edy is basically that concept, except also applied to small shopping. And designed such that you can use your phone instead of a card to pay.
(08:35:50 PM) Archen: 23: Yes. They are simultaneously the best and worst thing ever since my lappy is 3-pronged. ^^;
(08:36:13 PM) Archen: Right now 3DS is dutifully sucking up charge out of it, as is lappy.

Sanity is precious; use it sparingly.

6 (edited by SpitefulMurkrow 2014-03-24 21:27:39)

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

Back after a long and bit of a tiring, if fun day. Today started with getting some general advice about working in Japan as an expat after breakfast, which was surprisingly reassuring. Apparently it's fairly common for Japanese firms, particularly those that operate with English-language offices to "baby" expats relative to Japanese employees, which I would suppose would be handy for not immediately scaring them to other firms. A particular quirk of Japanese office culture I was informed of is a strong emphasis on straight shooting, if you bungle something, management tends to not be interested so much in your excuse for it but rather your acknowledgement of your shortcomings and how you plan to improve upon them. There is apparently also a much stronger sense of risk-aversion in Japanese corporate culture and society for better or worse, which leads to some interesting stuff on the financial end. For living as an expat, it is apparently both fairly easy to live comfortably in Tokyo on a seemingly-modest income, and fairly easy to outstrip your income. The primary "money pits" that I was informed to be mindful of were transportation (especially cabs), entertainment, and to a smaller extent "convenience shopping".

Afterwards, there was a bit of an episode getting lost in the domestic terminals of Haneda airport to meet some friends of family who will be tagging along, which while annoying, was a good exposure to infrastructure in Tokyo. There are a number of parallel mass transit systems that are used in Tokyo. During the trip to and from Haneda, I wound up riding on the Rinkai Line of the Tokyo subway system, which is apparently insignificant enough to have half its stations glossed over by the JR map that usually makes the rounds on the internet; transferred over to a monorail line at a station called Tennozu Isle; and then from there had some misadventures involving color-coded shuttlebuses that run between the different terminals of Haneda. One of the primary things that hits you right away about mass transit in Tokyo is how nice everything is relative to American counterparts. Along with how much more convenient things become when you get a Suica card instead of paying for a ticket every time you enter a station... And also how fast fares rack up. Today I went through something on the order of 2000 yen just going from station to station in Tokyo. As of this point in time, the final stop of the Tokyo Monorail in Haneda Airport is also a testament to the strength of kawaii culture in Japan, and a kindly reminder that the whole lark about Japan being bought out by Nintendo that made the rounds back in 2011-2012 does have a kernel of truth to it.

After that, there was a belated lunch at a food court in a local... Not sure if it's closer to a "grocery store" or "department store". It was a rather interesting exposure to what the fast food scene looks like in Tokyo. There's clear-cut "local" fast food, and "foreign cuisine", which much like foreign cuisine at home, is rather humorously mutilated from its source. Whether or not it actually tastes good is a fairly hit-or-miss matter, some dishes do, and some most assuredly don't.

After lunch there was a bit of a crunched trip to Akihabara for sightseeing and shopping. The part of "Akiba" most tourists care about is located along the eastern half of the ring formed by the Yamanote Line. In the process of heading up to Akihabara from Shinagawa, you pass through some of the busiest train stations on the planet. Which also have some of the fastest trains on the planet pass through. Unfortunately for you Shinkansen buffs, moving, crowded trains tend to be really annoying for spur-of-the-moment snapshots, so I racked up a string of "near misses" for shots this time around. On the train rides, I occasionally saw some people playing video games on the train, and I saw a LOT more people using phones on the train. Unfortunately, Japan's parade of colorful and hyper-advanced "Galapagos phones" seems to have by and large taken a back seat to homogenized smartphones, especially iDevices, though given that I saw more than one person juggling multiple phones between pockets on the train, it could be that the said flipping and sliding oddities may still be lurking being quietly used in the shadows.

Akihabara is a place to nerd out really, really quickly, and a place go broke in about as much time. While it is called the "Electric Town" and truly does hold up as a mecca for all things involving solder and PCBs, it's also a locus of "otaku culture" in Japan, which leads to stuff like the AKB48 cafe which I didn't visit, and the 5-story Kotobukiya store filled with anime and game merch that I did visit. It's also a lesson that in Tokyo, you can get surprisingly far even with a pitifully weak understanding of Japanese, even if you'll find a lot of stuff gated off to you and restaurants to be the bane of your moonrune-deprived existence.

That said, at "Akiba", I was there first and foremost for video games, which there wasn't exactly a shortage of. At Akihabara, there are two types of stores: The ones that are good to browse, and the ones that are good to actually buy things from. An example of the former is Super Potato, a store that takes up the 3rd through 5th floors of a little hole in the wall across the street and a block down from the Kotobukiya shop. Super Potato has a really impressive selection of retro games, and is heavily steeped in a general "gaming culture" vibe. On the same floors as the games from yesteryear, you can pick up merch and OSTs. The 5th floor is taken up by a small arcade made up of Sega Naomis that while dingy, always has something going on in it. That said, heaven help you trying to buy anything in Super Potato, especially with the non-Anglophone staff. For places that are more practical for shopping, shops like Trader or outlets of chain stores like Sofmap are much more helpful. While Trader wasn't quite as good of a deal as Sofmap, it had better organization, and carried retro games and consoles in its main shop on Akihabara's main street. Shopping for video games in Akihabara is also a great way to find out about how not all markets are created equally. One of the most glaring examples would be that of a game that I picked up from my run to Akihabara, Panzer Dragoon Saga. In Japan, PDS is yet another RPG from a console that did okay-ish domestically and can be had for around 2000 yen. Now... America on the other hand...

So that marked my second day out here in the center of the universe. The remaining days will most likely be a bit more mobile and involve less changing of money, but in the meantime...

Picture Time!:

* The phone camera struck again, this time with a bigger gallery. Unfortunately, the gallery was kinda insanely huge and needed shuteye, so will attach links in SOON™.

Gallery's apparently too big for singular upload to imgur, so... Part 1.

Aaaand, part 2.

# of Streetpasses:

* 34 [spoiler]Would probably have been more if hands weren't occupied with a bag full of loot in Akihabara.

Yen Left:

* ¥19712 [spoiler]Ideally, this figure will not drop as dramatically until I get to Pokemon Center two days from now.

Item(s) GET:

* Jet Lag
* Suica card
* Sega Saturn + Controller [spoiler]This is especially valuable for me since a lot of the Saturn's games either were never localized, are a pain to emulate, or are dramatically cheaper in NTSC-J format even after hurdles of importing are factored in.
* Saturn Memory Card
* Panzer Dragoon Saga
* White Japanese 3DS
* Dragon Quest 7: Warriors of Eden
* Guild01
* Inazuma Eleven 1-2-3
* Monster Hunter 3G with Frankenstick [spoiler]Bought it for about the cost of a Frankenstick at home, so seemed like a worthy deal.
* Ace Attorney 5 [spoiler]No guesses for what series I've been meaning to get into in the near future.
* Ace Attorney Investigations 2

7

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

Probably a random question, but could you let me know what you think of Ace Attorney Investigations 2? I'm the only one I know who's played it.

8

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

Will do, though will have to thin out in-progress backlog a bit first. ^^;

Remind me, AAI2 is a sequel that is enjoyed best in sequence after the other AA games? Or also appreciable as a standalone game?

9 (edited by SpitefulMurkrow 2014-03-26 01:33:44)

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

Q&A Responses:

01:45:43 ***Tagg has to remember to ask Tracer if there's a different taste between Japanese and American McDonalds: http://i.imgur.com/B5ejXCs.jpg?

Ah, a good question, though there is actually a bit of an answer already hinted at in the pictures. That is, McDonalds is a lot less grody than at home, has a much stronger "family eatery" vibe to it. It generally has different choices of Happy Meal toys (on a few occasions, they give out Pokemon merch), and some very "Japanese" takes on western food items like burgers with eggs in them.

02:02:37 Tagg: Not sure if coins, tokens, or both: http://i.imgur.com/croCsSJ.jpg?

That's Japanese "small change". The parentheses is deliberate, in Japan, the smallest paper denomination is 1000 yen, or about $10. Which leads to interesting cases where a single coin can give you as much buying power as 20 quarters back home... Put in a form factor that's just begging to be dropped in between a station platform and a train as you're boarding the subway.

Today's Log

Hello everyone, I'm back from a long and hectic ride around the Yamanote Line. Today involved a lot of picking one's own battles for things to see in Tokyo, since it's only one day, and the Yamanote Line's a big loop.

We started out today by heading to Marunouchi through Tokyo Station after early morning coding and breakfast, which was surprisingly less maze-like, though every bit as crowded as I heard it to be. Along the way, I finally was able to successfully snap a couple pics of the Shinkansen, and noted that a few of the lines seem to have penchants for being kept 60-70 feet above street level, which presumably isn't terribly soothing to acrophobics. Marunouchi is known for being two things: A business district with some of the most obscenely high rents in Metropolitan Tokyo, and home to the Japanese Imperial Palace. The Imperial Palace, or what we peasants tourists are allowed to see of it from the outside moat is a nice green stretch in a sea of concrete and tarmac policed by the Imperial Family Defense Force, which consists of police officers from the Metropolitan Police Department, koi, pigeons, and vicious bioweapons called "swans". Today, we also had the fortune to spot a motorcade heading out from the Imperial Palace, which was a bit of a big deal for a small crowd of dutiful watchers on a street corner just beyond the outer moat, since even though the imperial family may not legally be gods anymore, they're still a fairly big deal in Japanese culture.

After Marunouchi, I headed north with my party on the Yamanote line past Akihabara to Ueno. If Japan is direly lacking children to the point of potential demographic crisis, Ueno represents the most eager attempt by Tokyo to try and assuage people otherwise. Ueno station happens to sit right next to one of the most popular park complexes in the entire city, and it hands-down had the highest concentration of Japanese minors that I've seen so far anywhere in this concrete jungle. Ueno Park is really one of those places where you could easily spend a day on your own and be satisfied. There's a zoo, a collection of museums along the northeast, some sundry shrines, and a nice pond complex in the southwest. Due to aiming to make it around the Yamanote Line today, we took a bit of a more cursory exploration of the place, we visited the Art building of the National Museum in the northeast, and then afterwards walked along some unfortunately generally uncooperative cherry trees that stubbornly insist that it's too early to bloom in late March to visit the ponds, where I had my chance to nibble a bit of Japanese street food.

After that, we unfortunately had to cut to the chase and skip Ikebukuro, which I kinda wanted to see, but made up for it by lunch and sightseeing at Shinjuku. Shinjuku is a very business-oriented district, and is perpetually busy even by Tokyo standards. After lunch, we decided to do what any sane person would do in a large collection of skyscrapers and get to the top of one of them, namely Hypnos HQ the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Offices, which give a view of pretty much everything that you could ever want to see in the sprawl, if recently beat out by the Sky Tree built in Sumida. There's a kinda kitchsy souvenir stand up on the observation deck, but hey, it sold konpeito, so it was good enough for me.

Following that, we went to the last major big stop (unless you count Harajuku) before we went through the entire loop, Shibuya. Shibuya is often portrayed as being a district dominated by youth life, including some strains of youth life that belong to more rebellious subcultures. While the average person isn't exactly walking down the street in Gothic Lolita attire or fighting mortal battles against evil graffiti spirits, it's fairly obvious that there is a kernel of truth behind Shibuya's presentation given how prolific graffiti is there relative to most of the rest of Tokyo. Tagging apparently knows no spatial limits in Shibuya. Whether it's at street level, on a pedestrian overpass 30 feet in the air, or a vacant billboard 40 feet above said overpass, there is a decent minority chance you might be able to spot a tag on said object.

Of course, then again, my expedition to Shibuya was unfortunately confined fairly tightly to the station. The main landmarks that I saw in Shibuya were Hachiko, which is perpetually mobbed by people looking for photo ops or simply a handy meeting place; the Moyai, which is Hachiko's underloved sculptural counterpart by the bus station; and the scramble crossing, which gives you a great view of the 109 and it's more ignored men's department that actually borders the crossing, the largest jumbotron to sit on top of a Starbucks ever, and some rather garish neon-filled alleys with small shops and pachinko and pachislo parlors. For the audiophiles, Shibuya is a bit worse off than it used to be. HMV has been gone for a couple years, as have most of its competitors due to CD sales crashing in Japan. A stubbornly resistant exception to this rule is Tower Records, which continues to sit defiantly in all it's 5-story glory north of the station right by the train tracks. The department stores are also a great, if expensive place to eat dinner, which is where I wound up whiling away about 3 hours over a rather filling, if pricey sashimi bento.

Part of the reason why my jaunt to Shibuya was so attenuated was that I wound up taking a detour out to Setagaya to pay a visit to Carrot Tower above Senganjaya station. For those curious why I bothered heading out to a residential district on a no-name line, the answer is simple: It's essentially the real-world Celadon Condominiums. It's exactly what you think it is, except it's more orange, has fewer violations of the fourth wall, and is sorely lacking in free Eevees. But yeah, it was well worth the venture off the beaten path, even if I had to not pry too deeply to avoid irking the local salarymen. Had I had more time, I probably would have spent some time exploring the smaller shops and back alley arcades there. While cheap and a bit crummy, they tend to be some of the most down-to-earth ways of seeing how local culture operates.

Tomorrow will be a bit less fun and games, since I will be touring an office that I may be working at later this year to get a feel for it, though should still have some time to get into hijinks after my tour. I can already think of a certain tourist trap next to Hamamatsucho station with my name on it...

Picture Time!:

Alas, is delayed. Again. Due to sheer volume of pictures that I need to upload. Will upload in pieces as I can.

Part 1, kudos to my phone, which lasts all the way up until it ran out of battery in Ueno.

Part 2: Shinjuku, Shibuya, and Setagaya.

# of Streetpasses:

* 79 [spoiler]Yes, you're reading that right, that's 45 more than yesterday. I had to more or less bin perfectly good Streetpasses from minigames because they were coming in that fast. Busy train stations tended to be the primary contributors.

Yen Left:

* ¥15976

Item(s) GET:

* Jet Lag
* Suica card
* Sega Saturn + Controller
* Saturn Memory Card
* Panzer Dragoon Saga
* White Japanese 3DS
* Dragon Quest 7: Warriors of Eden
* Guild01
* Inazuma Eleven 1-2-3
* Monster Hunter 3G with Frankenstick
* Ace Attorney 5
* Ace Attorney Investigations 2
* Mini art plate plus stand from National Museum
* Candy bento box with konpeito rice from Metropolitan Government Office
* Illustrated aerial map of Tokyo from above
* 5 advertising flyers acquired in about as many yards stepping out from Shibuya Station
* PSP data cable [spoiler]Was to pull pictures off a Sony camera that's seen its better days since I left my data cable across the Pacific.

10

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

Reactions pt. 1:

Hmm... curious about the longposts in the museum. :P Poetry? Constitutions?

How were the woodcuts & fans? Lots of kimonos I see...

Sanity is precious; use it sparingly.

11

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

re: Part 1 Questions:

The long strips of paper are a mix of poetry, religious and clerical writings, and a few paintings. The last one that I saw was a collection of interleaved paintings from the Edo era, so hyperhorizontalism has had a bit of a history in Japanese art, it would seem.

The woodcuts and fans were nice, though the older you get, the less vibrant and more worn-out they become due to being made of paper and fabric. If it's full of color and detail, chances are that it's from a more recent era such as the Edo Period as opposed to say, the Kamakura period. Other crafts such as ceramics and metalware have a tendency to hold up a bit better than them.

12 (edited by SpitefulMurkrow 2014-03-26 22:20:58)

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

Hi everyone, today I didn't quite get to go to as many places as in days past. My morning and a good chunk of my afternoon were taken up by touring a potential worksite conveniently just across the street from my hotel (which is the entire formal reason why I even got to take this trip to begin with). At my prospective worksite, I was given a tour of the grounds (which I have omitted since it takes ages to upload large galleries, and I presume it would be of limited interest), and found out, yes, there are companies in Japan that don't let you just waltz through their lobby up to their offices. While there, I was shown a surprisingly competent cafeteria that serves free breakfasts + lunches, different departments with some interestingly varied internal policies regarding dress and office conduct, and went through a Q&A session regarding life at the company and for an expat in Tokyo from a Briton who's been working in Japan for 10 years. While what I found out was somewhat reassuring in convincing me that I wouldn't have massively unreasonable expectations foisted onto me as an employee, I also found out that I kinda have a looming deadline for deciding whether or not to accept the offer the company has extended to me within a week. So... Yeah... Haven't fully figured out what I want to do on that front yet.

After the worksite tour, I went off to Senso-ji in Asakusa. It's a major shrine to Kannon that acts as a non-trivial tourist trap. While Japanese people may not be terribly religious anymore, they certainly have a mind for tradition, which there was no shortage of at Senso-ji. Whether it was burning incense, paying 100 yen to leave wishes tied to rods, or happily pitching spare change down collection grates, a lot of the visitors were rather eager to at least pay lip service to shrine rites. It's an interesting contradiction of ethoses. The shrine is built according to principles of sanctity and divine enlightenment... And it's completely ringed by modern buildings and amenities, including a kinda compact and rickety amusement part to the north, and the Sky Tree looming over all of Asakusa to the east.

On the way back to the hotel from Asakusa, I took the time to stop by the Pokemon Center near Hamamatsucho Station. It's a bit smaller than the buzz tends to make it sound like: a simple showroom packed to the brim with a varied and rotating stock of Pokemon merch of all imaginable stripes. Unfortunately, having a rotating stock also means that sometimes you won't be as impressed with the stock as you would have been a few months ago. As of right now, the Center's in full Diancie movie promotion mode... Kinda. There were a lot of Mega Evo plushes... But no Megazards. And no Diancie or Yveltal, so... It was a little interesting to pick at potential modus operandis. You can also buy systems and games there, if at much worse prices than at second-hand retailers like Sofmap, or even most department stores. That said, I was extremely tempted to pick up a copy of Japanese HeartGold, since it's out of print in most places elsewhere in the world and many used copies are minus one Pokewalker, but relented in favor of buying other merch. In the end, I wound up picking up a Bulbasaur for a sibling who requested one, and some stuff for myself. There's also this little disconnected annex called a "Union Room" where you can stop by to play some arcade games like Battrio and take part in a raffle for small prizes if you spend more than certain amounts in the shop. I found it a bit of a cute gesture, if a little inconvenient, but hey, I got some free stickers out of it!

Tomorrow I'll be headed off to Mt. Fuji, and then making more or less a direct beeline for Haneda. So my log for that day will likely be a retrospective after I get home.

Picture Time!:

There's only one gallery today, but it's a bit of a big one, so it'll be a bit late to come again.

And here they are.

# of Streetpasses:

* 107

Yen Left:

* ¥6476

Item(s) GET:

* Jet Lag
* Suica card
* Sega Saturn + Controller
* Saturn Memory Card
* Panzer Dragoon Saga
* White Japanese 3DS
* Dragon Quest 7: Warriors of Eden
* Guild01
* Inazuma Eleven 1-2-3
* Monster Hunter 3G with Frankenstick
* Ace Attorney 5
* Ace Attorney Investigations 2
* Mini art plate plus stand from National Museum
* Candy bento box with konpeito rice from Metropolitan Government Office
* Illustrated aerial map of Tokyo from above
* 5 advertising flyers acquired in about as many yards stepping out from Shibuya Station
* PSP data cable
* Bulbasaur Plushie for sibling
* Farfetch'd Plushie
* Tyrunt Plushie
* Amaura Plushie
* Pokemon Hanafuda Deck [spoiler]Probably one of my less sane purchases given that it cost more than the last two plushies combined, but hey, it's Japan. And it's Hanafuda.
* Helioptile + Heliolisk charms
* 2 sheets of Pokemon Battle Trozei stickers

13 (edited by SpitefulMurkrow 2014-03-29 04:44:11)

Re: Tracer's Journey to the Center of the Universe

Hello everybody, if you're wondering about why this following update may be reading a bit rushed, it's because A: I'm really tired. B: I have a flight leaving Haneda International at 11:45 local.

Today was a bit of a mixed bag. Got up bright and early to beeline to Hamamatsucho again, though instead of going to the Pokemon Center for a second visit, I went to the bus terminal to join a tour of Mount Fuji and the Hakone area. For people who explicitly wanted to see Mt. Fuji, today was a bit of a bust, given that the weather was foggy and rainy, which made distance vistas non-existent. Also, the road up Mt. Fuji was blocked at the first way station, which kinda prevented gaining any real altitude. That said, for me, the stranger who's never seen anything of Japan until this week, just seeing Japan outside of Tokyo was already quite the experience.

When outside of Tokyo, it becomes really apparent what kind of world Tajiri felt the current and prior generation of children in Japan were missing out on. Towns are compact and quaint, with green and soothing scenery as opposed to the sea of concrete and asphalt in Tokyo, and life seems to tick at a slower pace. Unlike the world of Pokemon, the whole feel of the Japanese countryside is a bit of a novelty nowadays, which leads to pretty much every town becoming a tourist trap, which added a couple thousand yen to the bill from little knicknacks. Our trip through Hakone ended at Odawara's Shinkansen station, which was our group's ticket back to Tokyo. Riding the Shinkansen is an awful lot like riding a somewhat less restrictive plane, complete with "turbulence"... With more legroom. And no seatbelts. Oh, and chargers next to the window seats. It's an experience that you should definitely make a point of doing at some point if in Japan, though not too often. Our particular 40-minute ride apparently would have cost about $40 if we hadn't had it covered by the tour group.

After that, there was dinner. And then coming here, waiting for my plane in about an hour, sitting next to my Saturn that is coming onboard with me due to lack of suitcase space, having burned through the last of my yen on Green Tea Kit-Kats. All in all, I must say that regardless of whether or not I come back to the Land of the Rising Sun for more practical purposes this fall, I can say that this trip was well worth taking, and hope that I'll be able to take another trip here at sometime in the future.

Picture Time!:

This is the part where normally I give an excuse for not having pictures right away with this post, in lieu of that, please accept a "Please Understand" and expect to see my last set of photos once I'm back on American clay.

Here's part 1.

And part 2.

# of Streetpasses:
* 134

Yen Left:
* ¥0

Item(s) GET:
* Jet Lag
* Suica card
* Sega Saturn + Controller
* Saturn Memory Card
* Panzer Dragoon Saga
* White Japanese 3DS
* Dragon Quest 7: Warriors of Eden
* Guild01
* Inazuma Eleven 1-2-3
* Monster Hunter 3G with Frankenstick
* Ace Attorney 5
* Ace Attorney Investigations 2
* Mini art plate plus stand from National Museum
* Candy bento box with konpeito rice from Metropolitan Government Office
* Illustrated aerial map of Tokyo from above
* 5 advertising flyers acquired in about as many yards stepping out from Shibuya Station
* PSP data cable
* Bulbasaur Plushie for sibling
* Farfetch'd Plushie
* Tyrunt Plushie
* Amaura Plushie
* Pokemon Hanafuda Deck
* Helioptile + Heliolisk charms
* 2 sheets of Pokemon Battle Trozei stickers
* Mt. Fuji mascot doll
* Wooden Puzzle Box
* ¥3000 Nintendo Network Card
* Box of Green Tea Kit-Kats