I love it when you say: "Is it only in Japan?". Honestly, Japanese people live in the future. Everyone else has to learn from Japan. (I hope to be visiting soon ^.^ !!! )
3:03 same thing happened when my dad and I were in Japan back in 2012. It was late evening and we'd just gotten off the train into the station connecting to the one by the Tokyo Disney parks and their associated hotels. It being late, we were tired and didn't notice dad had dropped his wallet on the way through the station (which would've been REALLY bad to lose since it had our passports in it at the time) and this very nice man actually hurried after us for what must have been over a minute without us noticing, just so he could return dad's wallet to him. We were very grateful and impressed by how kind it was he'd gone so far out of his way for us like that
i was surprised by the friendliness and hospitality of the japanese people i was approaced at a night club by two nice guys who chatted with me and spent the whole evening with me !! allso one of the guys who i met that night offerd me to go with him to visit a cool remote place near fuji san where there was this cool and calm village where we spent the day . one of the most autenthic and coolest days of my life ! we were strolling in the village streets looking for the main street. he went and asked this mature lady who was carrying her groceries after the grocery store and she just took us "under the wing " and offerd us to show us around, i was completly shooked by that kindness and hospitallity and was so gratefull for the experience overall in japan ! note: in all of my stay this wasnt the only time i got completly mind blown by the caring and kindness and the unuiqe way of living life of the japanese people i reccommend anyone to go and experience it yourselfs!
I am soo glad i found this channel today. I love Japanese culture a lot and would love to learn more. Its great to know how life is in Japan from your perspective.
I'm from the Philippines, back when I was probably in 4th Grade (2016), our mother fetched us from school because they suddenly announced that there will be no classes on that day. With my mom and sister, we walked over the crossroad near our school because public transportation would stop near it to collect some passengers. While we're waiting for the public transport, there were a group of Japanese tourist (all of them are elderly) also waited, one of the Japanese tourist approached me and my sister saying "Hi" and bowing to us, She is an elderly Japanese woman wearing a Japanese flag cap, she reached her wallet and gave me and my sister a "Crane origami" she can speak English tho and said, "take this as a gift for you", I immediately said thank you while bowing to her back. I wonder if she is still okay.... Gosh I would love to visit Japan one day.
"Turtle taxi" 🐢🚕 for yukkuri button 😂😂 What a kawaii expression!! Amazing how Japanese turn everything cute so easily! And fish in such beautiful clean street waters! In downtown Kanazawa I saw goldfishes swimming in narrow street canals while waiting for a bus, I got emotional with that. Can people imagine how difficult it is to have and keep water that clean running on open air in a city?? What a treasure this is!
#15 one is so heart warming. I once went to a hospital (not Japan, I wish I could go there tho) and left me shoes out as required. They got STOLEN. Mind you, it was in a sea of slippers. I kept mine in a DISTINCT corner on me mum's slippers (you can say mine kept me mum's slippers safe)
I lived in Japan a couple of years during college. I had a very basic apartment. When I went with a friend to stay at her aunt's house in Kyoto, she had this complicated shower and her aunt explained how it worked but when I went to take one, I couldn't figure it out. I was too embarrased to ask again so I took cold showers all week. Luckily, it was very hot (August) and the cold showers weren't that bad.
OMG! I wish that our shampoo and conditioner had dots or ridges on the plastic bottles so that we could tell one from another. When I'm taking a shower, I can't read the label because I don't have my glasses on. It's so frustrating. That's a great solution. Another idea, which wasn't in this video, was that traditional Japanese tile roofs have ridges on the end, so that roofers (or anyone who has to go on the roof for some reason) have a ridge that will break their fall if they start to slide down the roof. That was one of the smartest things I've ever seen. Why don't all roofs have that?
In the US, I have only seen Braille on ATM machines, or in some cases on maps at Amusement parks. There may be other examples, but I am unaware of them. I think we are very much lacking in accessibility for the blind, and other disabilities here. (My son is disabled, but he is not blind. We encounter things that are difficult for him in the way our society functions, but in a completely different way.)
I never use an umbrella. Don't even own one. Most of the time when it rains I'm only outside in it for 30secs or less just to walk in and out of a store.
You should give us your recommendations on where to go in Japan! I have visited once before, and I went to Tokyo, Kyoto and Hiroshima. Please let me know if you have any other recommended places for tourists to visit :)
There are so many great places to go, like Osaka, Fukuoka, Okinawa and Hokkaido! I'm also going to introduce my recommendations, so please look forward to it!
@@sparxstreak02 The prefecture Oita is called Hot Spring country, they have many great and old onsens. the Oldest onsen though is in the prefecture Ehime in Matsuyama city. It's called Do-go Onsen! But I highly recommend Beppu City in Oita Prefecture. Or Kanairo Onsen in Nakatsu City (also in Oita Prefecture). If you want a beautiful view you can go to the Suginoi Hotel in Beppu City (it's a little pricy, but the night views are worth it.)
6:05 I hope u never fly United Airlines Shugy! 😫 They once destroyed a musician’s guitar 🎸 in transit & when they refused 2 compensate he wrote a song about how horrible their airline was! 😆 The song’s called ‘United Breaks Guitars’ my god, your reaction to that would be GOLDEN! 🤣
I am a Japanese language student. The thing which amazes me is the politeness level of Japanese people. My friends usually joke around that "you can't have a fierce argument/fight while you speak in Japanese,"
As a person who loves courtesy and enjoys following rules and laws designed for the well-being of others, i long for this kind of society. Unfortunately i'm American. lol.
Love the video !!! Learn a lot of information I didn't know about Japan Love the live fish 🐟 on the streets As a driver i wondering how the traffic works if there also this kind of crossings and how long it takes. Greetings from Greece
Thank you for your compliment😁! Answer to your question, Yes, there are some other crossing like this type!! It is in big city like Osaka, Fukuoka, Tokyo. You have to wait about 120 seconds for the traffic right in Shibuya scramble crossing!!
I live in georgia and its a common thing to see manholes with names on them and sometimes people vist places where a manhole where there name is I've been to mine but i forget where it is
I am Japanese myself and I was shocked at the kindness of neighboring Prefectures after the 2011 Tsunami took so many people in my town alone I'm from Ishinomaki-Ayukawa in Miyagi prefecture
In Australia, you cannot cross on an angle. That’s called Jay-walking and if a policeman sees you, you can receive a fine. I think it’s for safety reasons. If you cross at an angle, you are on the road for longer than if you walked straight across. Also, if a pedestrian crossing is nearby, you must use it.
I've never seen braille on items like drink cans or shampoo bottles before, so at the very least they aren't in the west coast of the US, I'm not sure about other places though
He's a man of culture and has nothing to hide... I respect him and his manly desires way more then all those sneaky bastards who try to hide what is known by everyone! xD
Here in the U.S. and in Southern California where I live. I have only seen Braille on buildings and inside of them, restrooms, and some crosswalks on the floor, but never on stuff like cans , shampoo & conditioners bottles.
I basically clicked to see how many of these are true, because I've seen a lot of fake ones, such as claiming that fish phone booth art installation is part of a "recycling" program and all the phone booths were turned into fish tanks.
In the Philippine schools, the students also clean but its limited to our assigned classroom only. This is implemented during primary and probably until high school in some institutions. That's why I felt so disappointed when during night school we would use a classroom used by college kids during the day which was really dirty When I visited Japan, I noticed that when a bus loads your luggage they put a tag on it. Also not exclusive to Japan but the pocket wifi rental is super convenient and not available in most countries. There's also a clothes spray in the hotel to remove scents, haven't noticed that in other countries. One negative thing though that is unique to Japan is that when souvenir shopping, the cashier give multiple plastic bags/packaging for the convenience of the buyer who might want to re-gift the items. They don't ask the buyer. I find it negative because it promotes the use of more plastics
I would absolutely love to go to Japan and travel all over, just to see it as a whole. But I will be overwhelmed because I don't know the language and my anxiety will take over. 😖
I think I've seen braille (sorry if I miss spelled) on juice cans from Korean. But definitely I've never seen braille on our local products (I'm from Canada).
I am saving for visiting Japan in next two years I would be starting my medical degree next year 2nd year i would have a month of holiday !! Damn excited even if it's too early to be so.
We put braille on medicine containers in the UK and it is starting to appear ib all banknotes other than £5, I am now really wondering why you wouldn't put it on things like beverage cans too, seems like it would be helpful to people with visual impairments.. Probably not prpfitable to the plutocrats to need to stamp the tops...
All country's unique in there on way like my country perhaps the Philippines we are source of coconut in whole world even in the city's there are coconut's
I'd be like Homer Simpson in Japan crying about how wonderful your toilets are in Japan. You are light years ahead of us! How civilized. In the USA people rattle the stall doors if they don't see your feet. And forget about the smells...
When I was a kid, about 11 or 12 years old, I was out to lunch with my aunt. We found a small coin purse and it was full of a bunch of money (I think around $300). I wanted her to turn it into the restaurant staff, as we found it in their parking lot, but she kept it 😡 I thought that was very shameful. She isn't an evil person, but I felt she chose wrong that day. But here in the US, it seems most people choose to be selfish instead of forthright. Anyone could have a bad day and drop something precious (or at least important) to them. If it were me, I'd be so happy to find out someone had been respectful with my things, and had done their best to return them (money or anything else). My aunt didn't even need the money. She was single (no children) and owned TWO houses AND a condo, had 2 dogs, and ate well, and dressed well. It was really distasteful for her to keep that money.
Just looking at this channel makes me sad cuz my family was supposed to go to Japan for about 2 weeks in March/April last year. Then covid happened. We were supposed to be in Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka & Hiroshima TT I had looked forward to it for at least half a year.
I understand what you feel. But yeah of course after covid you can enjoy and I really hope you and your family have excellent time in Japan. So don't be sad😁😁
Japan is cool but I need an app that can translate their and my language to make it easier for asking questions about the place. do you know what can help?
reverse parking is illegal in most US states. You drop something in USA there is a 99% chance you will never see it again. Most USA houses do not allow visitors to wear shoes inside. I was raised to not do that and consider it rude and nasty cause I have to clean floor after you leave. I have shoe area by my door.
Many things in the video you're discussing aren't unique to Japan actually. Many things you can even find in the USA if you know where to look, not limited to: diagonal crosswalks, cubic watermelons and many others.
Sorry dude, honestly loved Japan, however, saw this video (well at least the 1st 4 min), just a bit ago. Not going to stick around for the same and yes yours was a little bit better, but what can say - except "Japan" is a great country!
@@SHUGYSJAPANHOUSE Voltes V is an Anime from Japan in the 80' i think.. when we were kids most of us here in the Philippines love it... and GMA a tv network will re create it called Voltes V legacy ruclips.net/video/XJ4ChZPlikM/видео.html
"If you look close, it's 4 in the morning, no one would be using internet around that time." Me : *looks over at the time while I'm watching this* whew.. it's only 3:53 am... I still have crap to do though..
I love it when you say: "Is it only in Japan?". Honestly, Japanese people live in the future. Everyone else has to learn from Japan. (I hope to be visiting soon ^.^ !!! )
3:03 same thing happened when my dad and I were in Japan back in 2012.
It was late evening and we'd just gotten off the train into the station connecting to the one by the Tokyo Disney parks and their associated hotels.
It being late, we were tired and didn't notice dad had dropped his wallet on the way through the station (which would've been REALLY bad to lose since it had our passports in it at the time) and this very nice man actually hurried after us for what must have been over a minute without us noticing, just so he could return dad's wallet to him.
We were very grateful and impressed by how kind it was he'd gone so far out of his way for us like that
It is a really good story and I'm glad you have a nice memory.
People keep telling me to don't tell my year of birth :)
@@maxxurr Please don’t share that since that could share your age, we really don’t know who could be reading these comments
@@maxxurr yes actually please don’t share age you were born we might don’t know who might be reading this😌😊😇
"Who uses wifi at 4 in the morning?"
As I sit here at 4 am.
Same
i was surprised by the friendliness and hospitality of the japanese people i was approaced at a night club by two nice guys who chatted with me and spent the whole evening with me !!
allso one of the guys who i met that night offerd me to go with him to visit a cool remote place near fuji san where there was this cool and calm village where we spent the day .
one of the most autenthic and coolest days of my life !
we were strolling in the village streets looking for the main street.
he went and asked this mature lady who was carrying her groceries after the grocery store and she just took us "under the wing " and offerd us to show us around,
i was completly shooked by that kindness and hospitallity and was so gratefull for the experience overall in japan !
note:
in all of my stay this wasnt the only time i got completly mind blown by the caring and kindness and the unuiqe way of living life of the japanese people i reccommend anyone to go and experience it yourselfs!
😁😁😁
I am soo glad i found this channel today. I love Japanese culture a lot and would love to learn more. Its great to know how life is in Japan from your perspective.
I am so glad to read what you say.
Thank you
Me too!
"this is why people think japan is the safest country in the world"
kindest and invaded by *FRIKING* typhoons *god made my fav country scary (╯︵╰,)*
I'm from the Philippines, back when I was probably in 4th Grade (2016), our mother fetched us from school because they suddenly announced that there will be no classes on that day. With my mom and sister, we walked over the crossroad near our school because public transportation would stop near it to collect some passengers. While we're waiting for the public transport, there were a group of Japanese tourist (all of them are elderly) also waited, one of the Japanese tourist approached me and my sister saying "Hi" and bowing to us, She is an elderly Japanese woman wearing a Japanese flag cap, she reached her wallet and gave me and my sister a "Crane origami" she can speak English tho and said, "take this as a gift for you", I immediately said thank you while bowing to her back. I wonder if she is still okay.... Gosh I would love to visit Japan one day.
That so interesting about the braille!
I’m also digging the decorative manhole covers, wish we had that in New York.
I’m glad that you enjoyed it!!
And about the manholes, it is good to feel the Japanese taste!
Also, very fun to search it too!
"Turtle taxi" 🐢🚕 for yukkuri button 😂😂 What a kawaii expression!! Amazing how Japanese turn everything cute so easily!
And fish in such beautiful clean street waters! In downtown Kanazawa I saw goldfishes swimming in narrow street canals while waiting for a bus, I got emotional with that. Can people imagine how difficult it is to have and keep water that clean running on open air in a city?? What a treasure this is!
#15 one is so heart warming. I once went to a hospital (not Japan, I wish I could go there tho) and left me shoes out as required. They got STOLEN. Mind you, it was in a sea of slippers. I kept mine in a DISTINCT corner on me mum's slippers (you can say mine kept me mum's slippers safe)
I lived in Japan a couple of years during college. I had a very basic apartment. When I went with a friend to stay at her aunt's house in Kyoto, she had this complicated shower and her aunt explained how it worked but when I went to take one, I couldn't figure it out. I was too embarrased to ask again so I took cold showers all week. Luckily, it was very hot (August) and the cold showers weren't that bad.
OMG! I wish that our shampoo and conditioner had dots or ridges on the plastic bottles so that we could tell one from another. When I'm taking a shower, I can't read the label because I don't have my glasses on. It's so frustrating. That's a great solution. Another idea, which wasn't in this video, was that traditional Japanese tile roofs have ridges on the end, so that roofers (or anyone who has to go on the roof for some reason) have a ridge that will break their fall if they start to slide down the roof. That was one of the smartest things I've ever seen. Why don't all roofs have that?
In the US, I have only seen Braille on ATM machines, or in some cases on maps at Amusement parks. There may be other examples, but I am unaware of them. I think we are very much lacking in accessibility for the blind, and other disabilities here. (My son is disabled, but he is not blind. We encounter things that are difficult for him in the way our society functions, but in a completely different way.)
You would probably see me in lots of your videos my name is Victoria and you seem like a very kind person 🥰🥰🥰
I know you gave me lots of comment and I appreciate you so much😄
I never use an umbrella. Don't even own one. Most of the time when it rains I'm only outside in it for 30secs or less just to walk in and out of a store.
You should give us your recommendations on where to go in Japan! I have visited once before, and I went to Tokyo, Kyoto and Hiroshima. Please let me know if you have any other recommended places for tourists to visit :)
There are so many great places to go, like Osaka, Fukuoka, Okinawa and Hokkaido!
I'm also going to introduce my recommendations, so please look forward to it!
@@SHUGYSJAPANHOUSE what are the best Onsen locations that you’ve seen?
@@sparxstreak02 The prefecture Oita is called Hot Spring country, they have many great and old onsens. the Oldest onsen though is in the prefecture Ehime in Matsuyama city. It's called Do-go Onsen! But I highly recommend Beppu City in Oita Prefecture. Or Kanairo Onsen in Nakatsu City (also in Oita Prefecture). If you want a beautiful view you can go to the Suginoi Hotel in Beppu City (it's a little pricy, but the night views are worth it.)
@@wanderingtotoro8980 thanks 😊 they all sound wonderful! 🙏
Let me recommend Sendai and Ishinomaki both have amazing cultures of their own
6:05 I hope u never fly United Airlines Shugy! 😫
They once destroyed a musician’s guitar 🎸 in transit & when they refused 2 compensate he wrote a song about how horrible their airline was! 😆
The song’s called ‘United Breaks Guitars’ my god, your reaction to that would be GOLDEN! 🤣
Japan sounds amazing!!
I would love to visit Japan one day!
I really like your videos! Tumbled in from your react video of Jaiden's visit to Japan and have stayed since!
現在はまだコロナウイルスがあるけど、必ずいつか日本に行きたい!
I am a Japanese language student. The thing which amazes me is the politeness level of Japanese people. My friends usually joke around that "you can't have a fierce argument/fight while you speak in Japanese,"
As a person who loves courtesy and enjoys following rules and laws designed for the well-being of others, i long for this kind of society. Unfortunately i'm American. lol.
We have it same there are very rarely few occasions when people actually do care about some humbleness and politeness or rule following...
Love the video !!! Learn a lot of information I didn't know about Japan
Love the live fish 🐟 on the streets
As a driver i wondering how the traffic works if there also this kind of crossings and how long it takes. Greetings from Greece
Thank you for your compliment😁!
Answer to your question,
Yes, there are some other crossing like this type!!
It is in big city like Osaka, Fukuoka, Tokyo.
You have to wait about 120 seconds for the traffic right in Shibuya scramble crossing!!
I’ve been to Japan 6 times. Luckily my mom grew up in Japan and knows the metro system. It was very fun.
I really love your videos, keep it up 👍
Japan is so innovative, wow.
I live in georgia and its a common thing to see manholes with names on them and sometimes people vist places where a manhole where there name is I've been to mine but i forget where it is
Nice video! Love your content. You have earned a subscriber :)
This is amazing
Japan is fascinating. I would love to visit one day.
I am Japanese myself and I was shocked at the kindness of neighboring Prefectures after the 2011 Tsunami took so many people in my town alone I'm from Ishinomaki-Ayukawa in Miyagi prefecture
In Australia, you cannot cross on an angle. That’s called Jay-walking and if a policeman sees you, you can receive a fine. I think it’s for safety reasons. If you cross at an angle, you are on the road for longer than if you walked straight across. Also, if a pedestrian crossing is nearby, you must use it.
Fun fact
For anyone who sees this
Square watermelon, tho usefull in storage
Isn't really bought for eating but mostly bought for display
I added Shimabara city to my booklisted cities.
That looks so interesting. Please covid, please leave quick so i can travel again.
I've never seen braille on items like drink cans or shampoo bottles before, so at the very least they aren't in the west coast of the US, I'm not sure about other places though
@@ross6753 braille on medicine sounds really useful, if only we had it here, same with the logos for visually impaired
@@ross6753 I'm in California, I've only seen braille on building signs and doors, and I've heard about braille books
@@ross6753 bush fires are doing their usual thing, wildfire season is pretty much here so there's already been some activity
If Japan wouldn’t have that many earthquakes I would love to live there for a while. Or maybe I should try to overcome my fear.
I love how he admits he bought porn magazines from the vending machine 🤣🤣🤣
He's a man of culture and has nothing to hide... I respect him and his manly desires way more then all those sneaky bastards who try to hide what is known by everyone! xD
@@kristofmertens267 yes, he is a man of culture indeed👌😎
#20 we have this one also in a few shopping centers. (Germany)
Here in the U.S. and in Southern California where I live. I have only seen Braille on buildings and inside of them, restrooms, and some crosswalks on the floor, but never on stuff like cans , shampoo & conditioners bottles.
I basically clicked to see how many of these are true, because I've seen a lot of fake ones, such as claiming that fish phone booth art installation is part of a "recycling" program and all the phone booths were turned into fish tanks.
In the Philippine schools, the students also clean but its limited to our assigned classroom only. This is implemented during primary and probably until high school in some institutions. That's why I felt so disappointed when during night school we would use a classroom used by college kids during the day which was really dirty
When I visited Japan, I noticed that when a bus loads your luggage they put a tag on it. Also not exclusive to Japan but the pocket wifi rental is super convenient and not available in most countries. There's also a clothes spray in the hotel to remove scents, haven't noticed that in other countries.
One negative thing though that is unique to Japan is that when souvenir shopping, the cashier give multiple plastic bags/packaging for the convenience of the buyer who might want to re-gift the items. They don't ask the buyer. I find it negative because it promotes the use of more plastics
the school cleaning thing my old school did that cause the cousdians did not do a good job cleaning so the class would clean it
most of the stuff he totally agrees with seems to be adaptations for huge populations in tight spaces..i.e a wall of open/in use toliets.
I would absolutely love to go to Japan and travel all over, just to see it as a whole. But I will be overwhelmed because I don't know the language and my anxiety will take over. 😖
Just subscribed to this channel; you are adorable!
I think I've seen braille (sorry if I miss spelled) on juice cans from Korean. But definitely I've never seen braille on our local products (I'm from Canada).
#13 Man, I don't know if this is a Saitama thing, but I rarely see people only walking up the left side of the staircases at train stations!
I am saving for visiting Japan in next two years I would be starting my medical degree next year 2nd year i would have a month of holiday !! Damn excited even if it's too early to be so.
We put braille on medicine containers in the UK and it is starting to appear ib all banknotes other than £5, I am now really wondering why you wouldn't put it on things like beverage cans too, seems like it would be helpful to people with visual impairments.. Probably not prpfitable to the plutocrats to need to stamp the tops...
appreciate the honesty :D 10:34
All country's unique in there on way like my country perhaps the Philippines we are source of coconut in whole world even in the city's there are coconut's
We too clean up our own school and it's pretty hard
Other countries :- don't forget your phone in the wash room
Japan :- don't forget your baby in the wash room
The trains in germany have extra smoking areas too
Good video:-)
Thank you soooo much!
I can’t wait to go to Japan 🇯🇵
I love your videos
we have mint tipped toothpicks in brazil too
I love Japan so much :D
I'd be like Homer Simpson in Japan crying about how wonderful your toilets are in Japan. You are light years ahead of us! How civilized. In the USA people rattle the stall doors if they don't see your feet. And forget about the smells...
"Who uses wi-fi at 4 in the morning" me watching this channel in my bed at 5AM *nervious sweat* "hehe... i know right?"
Also vending machines of porn? GODDAMN how can i move to japan
also seems they point out the countries all but legendary custom of bred in respect.
Ohhhh
So convenient
I’m glad you thought so!!
Thank you for the comment😁!
in japan they dont need your wallet
they need your umbrella
Me, a Japanese, knowing those but watching anyways bc this man’s accent is cute 😌
I’ve seen 1 toilet like that outside of Japan at someone’s house and they hat to get someone to make it
I love how you're blowing up
When I was a kid, about 11 or 12 years old, I was out to lunch with my aunt. We found a small coin purse and it was full of a bunch of money (I think around $300).
I wanted her to turn it into the restaurant staff, as we found it in their parking lot, but she kept it 😡 I thought that was very shameful.
She isn't an evil person, but I felt she chose wrong that day. But here in the US, it seems most people choose to be selfish instead of forthright.
Anyone could have a bad day and drop something precious (or at least important) to them. If it were me, I'd be so happy to find out someone had been respectful with my things, and had done their best to return them (money or anything else).
My aunt didn't even need the money. She was single (no children) and owned TWO houses AND a condo, had 2 dogs, and ate well, and dressed well. It was really distasteful for her to keep that money.
what is young jet li doing in this video? but his english got better. LOL
Just looking at this channel makes me sad cuz my family was supposed to go to Japan for about 2 weeks in March/April last year. Then covid happened. We were supposed to be in Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka & Hiroshima TT
I had looked forward to it for at least half a year.
I understand what you feel.
But yeah of course after covid you can enjoy and I really hope you and your family have excellent time in Japan.
So don't be sad😁😁
@@SHUGYSJAPANHOUSE yeah!
@@SHUGYSJAPANHOUSE u can enjoy japan in his channel.
This almost makes me want to move to japan
Occident,; oh my god, Only un Japan !!!
Japanese : Oh I never ser this !!
😏😏🤭🤭🤭🤭😂😂😂😂
I want to shift in Japan 🇮🇳 ❤️💕💕
Japan is cool but I need an app that can translate their and my language to make it easier for asking questions about the place. do you know what can help?
For audio translation, google translate or Microsoft translate or poke talk(this is not app)
For writing translation, I like Deepl.
@@SHUGYSJAPANHOUSE audio since it's the easiest to use. it's my dream to have conversations with Japanese people since they are the nicest.
I think japan and japanese people is from other world :)
I wish my people could adapt japanese traits our country would have been like japan
He just expose himself buying magazines
10:51 eeww gross🤮
I'm never using a toothpick in japan then. Mint makes me ill.
I want to live in Japan, now. XD
9:00
Me* Looks at the time
O_o
Lol Japan is literally the opposite of Philippines
2:08 yep
You could drink out of the toilets in the USA
We use fresh clean water
I don't know why
leaving your shoes neatly at the door is normal around the world except America
reverse parking is illegal in most US states. You drop something in USA there is a 99% chance you will never see it again. Most USA houses do not allow visitors to wear shoes inside. I was raised to not do that and consider it rude and nasty cause I have to clean floor after you leave. I have shoe area by my door.
Many things in the video you're discussing aren't unique to Japan actually. Many things you can even find in the USA if you know where to look, not limited to: diagonal crosswalks, cubic watermelons and many others.
I wish people could talk about how Japan is killing dolphins! Why is this so quiet??
Sorry dude, honestly loved Japan, however, saw this video (well at least the 1st 4 min), just a bit ago. Not going to stick around for the same and yes yours was a little bit better, but what can say - except "Japan" is a great country!
please react to Voltes V legacy
I've never heard it before.
I will check it and thank you for telling!
@@SHUGYSJAPANHOUSE Voltes V is an Anime from Japan in the 80' i think.. when we were kids most of us here in the Philippines love it... and GMA a tv network will re create it called Voltes V legacy ruclips.net/video/XJ4ChZPlikM/видео.html
Tidak/no
"If you look close, it's 4 in the morning, no one would be using internet around that time."
Me : *looks over at the time while I'm watching this* whew.. it's only 3:53 am... I still have crap to do though..