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The origins of Japan’s cult of “studying,” more warm weather for Tokyo, and the latest in Otaku Culture from Japan

Peter Payne by Peter Payne
18 years ago
in Your Friend in Japan

Japan is a very seasonal place, with specific things done only during the appropriate times of year. August is when you wear a yukata (cotton kimono) and hit the summer festivals, and if you want to enjoy tsukimi or sitting outdoors and taking in the beauty of the full moon, October is the time for that. Right now it’s “desk season,” when furniture retailers throughout Japan display high-quality study desks for the new crop of first graders who start school in April. Japan is very much a meritocracy, and the way to get ahead in life is benkyo (studying), and so kids are taught from a very early age that hitting the books is a good way to show your thanks to your parents for bringing you into the world. The desks themselves are really very well designed, made of higher quality wood than the desk I have at J-List, featuring built-in bright lights for reading and many small drawers for kids to organize their study materials. They’re also designed to grow with the user, with cute plastic mats with anime character art that can be removed when the child gets older. Buying a study desk is event in every child’s school life, and it’s a cold-hearted parent or grandparent who can resist buying the best for little Taro or Hanako. Is $700 a lot for a study desk for a first grader? I’ve lived in Japan so long I’m really not sure.

Japanese study desk
Speaking of seasons, Japan’s warmest winter in living memory continues, with many a balmy afternoon — I was even able to put the top down on my Miata a few times last month, usually unthinkable in February. It’s been so warm that the kaika or first blooming of the sakura trees, which is reported on as a point of national pride by the news media here, happened a full month earlier than usual. Except for the strong winds called kara-kaze that blow down from the Japan Alps every few days — which sound so similar to the F/A-18 jets that race over our house in San Diego from the former “Top Gun” airbase that I sometimes forget whether I’m in Japan or the States — it’s been really turn-off-the-computer-and-go-play-catch-with-my-son weather.

As Japan’s general fascination with otaku culture continues to grow, one word you hear a lot is Akiba-kei, which literally means “related to Akihabara,” the region of Tokyo traditionally known for its electronics stores but increasingly coming to serve as a center for anime, manga and cosplay culture. There are dozens of “Maid Cafe” establishments where you can go and have cake and coffee served to you by a beautiful girl in a maid outfit, and this category is always morphing into sub-genres, such as Imoto Cafe where all the girls pretend to be your younger sister and call you Oniichan, and Tsundere Cafe where the girls act like stereotypical bitchy-but-cute characters found in most every anime series these days. The latest potential boom in Akihabara might be the Mimikaki Cafe, where a beautiful woman will lay your weary head on her lap and spend thirty minutes with a traditional bamboo ear pick, gently scraping the ear wax out and taking all your cares away. If you’re not lucky enough to be in the Akihabara area this week, we’ve got some substitutes available at J-List that might help you experience this fun side of Japan.

J-List carries PC dating-sim games, fun anime games, all carefully translated into English and compatible with English Windows computers, with stories for all tastes and genres. Today we’re happy to announce that the latest title from Hirameki International, Pieces of Wonder, is in stock and shipping. A bold and interesting game in which you must guide three girls — Amane, Syouko and Taki — as they battle an alien race intent on taking over our world. A great RPG+ADV with real combat as well as adventures to resolve with each of the girls. Get it now!

This month’s Japanese adult video actress is the delicious Arisa Kanno, the elegant and stylish actress performing exclusively with Soft on Demand and their related companies. Arisa-chan was born December 9, 1984, in Tokyo. She’s 160 (5’2″), and her “three sizes” are 82 (B), 56 (W) and 82 (H), making for a fabulous hourglass shape that’s incidentally called kubire (koo-BI-reh) in Japanese. Her hobbies are running and playing volleyball, her favorite type of man is the strong, self-confident type, and her dream is to run in the Honolulu Marathon someday and study abroad in America.

Also, we’ve picked the new “H-Game of the Month” and it’s a really fun title, Gibo: Stepmother’s Sin, a dark exploration of some great themes from Guilty and Peach Princess. You grew up a happy boy, until the day you came home and found your mother in the arms of a man who wasn’t your father. Her unfaithfulness destroyed your happy home, and now you are mistrustful of the very word “mother.” But one day your father announces that he’s getting remarried, but instead of being old, your new stepmother is young and beautiful. How will you test her to see if she’s any different from the rest? Available this month only at a special price!

Tags: cosplayculturehistorykidsLearning Japanesemangaotaku

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