Who: Ana (20) - interests: vintage clothing, vintage toys, Japanese culture, Gundam (highlight) Base: Osaka phase + Tokyo phase Note: New to Japanese cuisine - food options flagged per Tokyo Food Guide and Osaka Food Guide


Tokyo Options

🧥 Shimokitazawa - Vintage Clothing (Top Pick)

Tokyo’s premier vintage neighborhood. More stores, better prices, better atmosphere than anywhere else.

What’s here:

  • 20+ independently curated vintage clothing stores in a 10-minute walk
  • Bohemian, local, not yet overrun by tourists
  • Great coffee, record shops, small live venues
  • 1970s–1990s American and European clothing, workwear, denim, outerwear

Key stores:

  • Flamingo - curated vintage, known for quality, multiple Shimokitazawa locations
  • Haight & Ashbury - two floors, wide range, reasonably priced
  • 2nd Street - chain but massive selection, good for bargain hunting

Transit from house: Ōmorimachi → Keikyu → Shinagawa → Yamanote → Shibuya → Keio Inokashira Line → Shimokitazawa (~35 min)

Pair with: Koenji (next stop on the Chuo Line) - similar vibe, more local, less curated

Time needed: 2–4 hours minimum. Easy to make a full day.


🎮 Akihabara - Electronics, Anime, Figures, Gaming

One of the most distinctive urban experiences in Japan. Worth a half-day.

What’s here:

  • Multi-story figure and toy stores (Kotobukiya, Volks, Animate)
  • Retro game stores: Super Potato (classic consoles, games, nostalgia items)
  • Manga, anime merchandise floors
  • Electronics: Yodobashi Camera (the flagship building - enormous)
  • Gacha capsule machines everywhere

Ana-specific picks:

  • Super Potato (retro gaming - several floors of vintage consoles and games)
  • Kotobukiya (figures, model kits, some Gundam adjacent)
  • Yodobashi Akiba for tech browsing

Transit from house: Ōmorimachi → Keikyu → Shinagawa → Yamanote → Akihabara (~30 min, ~¥400)

Pair with: Ueno (10 min walk) - Ueno Park, Ameya-Yokocho market, Tokyo National Museum if interested

Time needed: 2–4 hours


🎭 Nakano Broadway - Vintage Toys + Mandarake

Same transit line as Ikebukuro. Best for vintage collectibles, figures, and Mandarake.

What’s here:

  • Mandarake (multiple floors): vintage anime figures, toys, manga, games - the largest collection in Japan
  • Small vintage toy shops, vintage game stores
  • Less crowded than Akihabara, more focused on older/collector items
  • Jack Road and Kamekichi (watch shopping) on the same visit - Jeff and Matt’s watch stops

Transit from house: Ōmorimachi → Keikyu → Shinagawa → Yamanote → Shinjuku → Chuo Line → Nakano (~30 min, ~¥400)

Time needed: 1.5–3 hours; can combine with Akihabara as a full day

See also: Nakano Broadway


🌊 Odaiba — Pop Culture, Museums, Waterfront ✅ Gundam day option

Artificial island in Tokyo Bay — futuristic museums, anime landmarks, interactive attractions, and waterfront parks. Easy to fill a full day. Clusters around Daiba, Aomi, and Ariake.

Best picks for Ana:

  • Gundam Base Tokyo (DiverCity 7F) — flagship Gundam store; largest model kit and merch selection in Japan; must-stop · 💴 free entry
  • Unicorn Gundam Statue — free outdoor statue in DiverCity plaza; evening transformation show with light/sound effects (check times)
  • Tokyo Joypolis — SEGA’s indoor VR/arcade theme park; good for rainy weather or after Gundam · 💴 ~¥800 entry
  • UNKO MUSEUM TOKYO — absurd, colorful, wildly interactive; extremely photogenic; one of the most uniquely Japanese experiences available · 💴 ~¥2,200
  • Small Worlds Tokyo (Ariake) — huge detailed miniature worlds: sci-fi, anime cities, international landmarks; slow and absorbing · 💴 ~¥2,700
  • Miraikan (science museum) — robots, space, future tech; well-designed exhibits · 💴 ~¥630 · closed Tue

Waterfront: Marine Park walk → Statue of Liberty replica photo spot → Rainbow Bridge views → sunset

Transit from house: Ōmorimachi → Keikyu → Shinagawa → Yamanote → Osaki → Rinkai Line → Tokyo Teleport Station (~35 min, ~¥560) or scenic: → Shimbashi → Yurikamome monorail over Rainbow Bridge (~45 min)

Odaiba Waterfront for full detail


🌈 TeamLab Planets - Immersive Digital Art ✅ Visited Apr 15

Barefoot, fully immersive digital art installation. One of the most visually spectacular experiences in Japan.

Details:

  • Location: Toyosu (accessible from anywhere by subway)
  • Hours: 9:00 AM – 10:00 PM
  • Duration: ~1–1.5 hours
  • Cost: ~¥3,200 adult
  • Book in advance - tickets sell out, especially in April
  • No shoes (go barefoot through water installations)
  • Photography allowed throughout - excellent material

What it is: Walking through rooms of projected digital nature - waterfall rooms, flower rooms, a room you lie down in, water floors. Nothing like it.

Pair with: Odaiba (nearby), Toyosu Market if going early

Book: teamlab.art/e/planets

TeamLab Planets


👘 Kimono Rental - Asakusa

Rent a kimono for 2–4 hours and wear it through the Senso-ji temple area.

  • Cost: ¥3,000–6,000 depending on style and shop
  • Includes dressing assistance, obi (sash), accessories
  • Best locations: Several rental shops within 5 minutes of Senso-ji
  • Great for photos - the temple area is built for this
  • Return before shop closes (usually 5–6 PM)

Pair with: Senso-ji morning, Nakamise shopping arcade, Asakusa neighborhood


🏙️ Sunshine City + Animate Ikebukuro — Ikebukuro Day Option

Two major Ana-relevant stops in Ikebukuro, reachable in ~20 min from house.

Sunshine City (サンシャインシティ):

  • Large complex in Ikebukuro-East
  • Pokemon Center Mega Tokyo — flagship Pokemon store, large selection, always busy in April; can be crowded on weekends
  • Namco Namjatown — indoor amusement park with gyoza stadium, ice cream city, arcade games, character cafés (¥500 entry + per-attraction costs)
  • Animate Sunshine (smaller than the main Animate, same building complex)
  • Hours: Most shops 10:00 AM – 8:00 PM

Animate Ikebukuro (アニメイト池袋):

  • Largest Animate store in Japan — 8 floors of anime, manga, games, merchandise
  • Strong on current season releases; Gundam adjacent (figures, model accessories, artbooks)
  • Hours: 11:00 AM – 9:00 PM

Transit from house: Ōmorimachi → Keikyu → Shinagawa → Yamanote → Ikebukuro (~20 min, ~¥340)

Best use: Pair with other Yamanote-line stops on the same day. Can combine Ikebukuro, Harajuku, and Akihabara as a full loop on the Yamanote.


🌸 Harajuku / Takeshita Street

Youth culture, fashion, and kawaii in concentrated form.

What’s here:

  • Takeshita Street: crepes, kawaii fashion, fast-fashion boutiques, accessories
  • Ura-Harajuku (back streets): more curated vintage and designer pieces
  • Kiddy Land: character goods, toys, Japanese pop culture items - worth browsing
  • Omotesando: luxury retail on a beautiful tree-lined boulevard (good for window-shopping even without buying)

Transit from house: Ōmorimachi → Keikyu → Shinagawa → Yamanote → Harajuku (~25 min, ~¥340)

Pair with: Meiji Shrine (2 min walk) for contrast - from the most modern youth street to Japan’s most forested shrine


Osaka Options

🇺🇸 Amerika Mura (アメリカ村 / Amemura)

Osaka’s answer to Harajuku - youth fashion, vintage, streetwear, records.

Location: Shinsaibashi neighborhood, 5-min walk from Namba Station

What’s here:

  • Vintage clothing stores (American workwear, 80s/90s streetwear)
  • Independent boutiques and streetwear brands
  • Triangle Park at the center - the hangout point
  • Record stores, accessory shops

Transit from base: Osaka Metro → Namba → short walk

Pair with: Dotonbori dinner, Shinsaibashi covered arcade shopping, Hozenji Yokocho for dinner afterward

Amerika-Mura


🎮 Den Den Town (でんでんタウン)

Osaka’s electronics and anime district. Near Nipponbashi Station.

  • Anime merchandise, figures, gaming, electronics
  • Smaller than Akihabara but similar flavor
  • Good option on days staying in Osaka rather than going to Kyoto
  • Transit from base: Osaka Metro → Nipponbashi (~15 min)

Gundam - Highlights

LocationTypeNotes
Gundam Base Tokyo (DiverCity, Odaiba)Flagship storeMost complete collection in Japan
Unicorn Gundam Statue (Odaiba)Free outdoor statueTransformation show times - check schedule
Nakano BroadwayVintage/collector GundamMandarake has older kits and figures
AkihabaraCurrent + collectorMultiple dedicated stores

Food Strategy for Ana

See Tokyo Food Guide - Ana section for full breakdown. Short version:

  • Don’t force sushi - kaiten-zushi (conveyor belt) is the no-pressure way to try it if curious
  • Start with: Tonkatsu (Maisen in Omotesando is worth the trip on its own), gyoza, ramen
  • Shimokitazawa has excellent neighborhood cafés for lunch breaks between vintage stores
  • Depachika at Isetan Shinjuku - great for sampling without committing to a full meal