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- Attractions


Kobe Travel Guide: Japan’s Stylish Port City of Culture, Cuisine & Coastline
Kobe, nestled between the Rokko Mountains and the Seto Inland Sea, is one of Japan’s most elegant and internationally flavored cities. Famous worldwide for Kobe beef, scenic harbor views, and European-style charm, this port city in Hyogo Prefecture blends cosmopolitan living with Kansai’s relaxed warmth. Just 30 minutes from Osaka and 50 minutes from Kyoto, Kobe is the perfect stop for travelers seeking refined food, architecture, and culture — all framed by sea breezes and m


Nagoya Travel Guide: Japan’s Underrated Urban Gem Between Tokyo and Kyoto
Nagoya, Japan’s fourth-largest city and the capital of Aichi Prefecture, is often overlooked by travelers rushing between Tokyo and Kyoto...


Fukuoka Travel Guide: Kyushu’s Gateway to Culture, Cuisine, and Coastal Charm
Fukuoka, the vibrant capital of Kyushu, is where Japan’s southern spirit shines brightest. A coastal city that blends ancient heritage...


Hakone Travel Guide: Japan’s Mountain Escape of Art, Onsen, and Fuji Views
Just an hour from Tokyo, Hakone (箱根) feels like another world — a place where volcanic valleys breathe steam into the sky, red torii...


Nara Travel Guide: Japan’s Ancient Soul
Nara is where Japan’s spiritual and cultural heart first took shape. Before Kyoto and Tokyo, Nara was Japan’s original capital — a city...


Yokohama Travel Guide: Japan’s Port City of Innovation and Charm
Yokohama (横浜) is Japan’s second-largest city — a blend of seaside elegance, cosmopolitan history, and creative innovation just 30 minutes...


Tokyo Travel Guide: Japan’s Dynamic Capital
Tokyo is unlike any other city in the world. It is vast yet precise, futuristic yet steeped in tradition. More than 14 million people live within its official boundaries, and nearly 38 million in the greater metropolitan area — making it the largest urban region on Earth. Every year, millions of travelers arrive to experience its contrasts: neon-lit skyscrapers beside 17th-century shrines, tranquil gardens just a short walk from the busiest train station on the planet, Michel


Osaka Travel Guide: Japan’s Kitchen and City of Lively Spirit
If Kyoto is elegance and Tokyo is scale, Osaka is joy. Known as “Japan’s Kitchen” (天下の台所, Tenka no Daidokoro), Osaka has always been a...


Kyoto Travel Guide: Japan’s Timeless Cultural Capital
If Tokyo shows you the future of Japan, Kyoto reveals its past. For over a thousand years, Kyoto was Japan’s imperial capital, home to...


Hiroshima Travel Guide: From Resilience to Renewal
Hiroshima is a city that embodies both tragedy and hope. Known worldwide as the first city to suffer an atomic bombing, it has since...


Sapporo Travel Guide: Gateway to Japan’s Northern Frontier
Sapporo, the capital of Hokkaido, is a city where modern urban life meets dramatic northern landscapes. With a population of nearly 2...


Hokkaido Travel Guide: Japan’s Wild Northern Frontier
Hokkaido is Japan’s northernmost main island and its last great frontier. Known for its wide-open landscapes, dramatic seasonal...
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