The first time I went to Akihabara, I thought it would feel futuristic.
It didn’t. It felt old. Not bad old. More like parts of it had been stuck in the same era for twenty years. Tiny stores packed with yellowing manga volumes. Buildings where every floor sold one hyper-specific thing. Old arcade machines blasting sound into the street. Figure boxes stacked to the ceiling like somebody forgot to stop collecting in 2009.
That was honestly what made it memorable.
A lot of anime districts in Japan do not feel polished in real life. They feel dense, cluttered, a bit chaotic, and extremely specific. Which is probably why people become obsessed with them after visiting once.
Akihabara still has the big flashy stores everyone posts online, but the side streets are usually the interesting part. You walk upstairs into random buildings and suddenly find old card shops, retro game stores, tiny figure resellers, or entire floors dedicated to one anime you forgot even existed.
Places like Radio Kaikan and Mandarake are still worth visiting, mostly because they genuinely feel overwhelming in person. You realize pretty quickly that anime collecting in Japan is not treated like a niche hobby. Entire buildings are built around it.
Even now, Akihabara still gets covered regularly by major travel publications because it remains one of the most recognizable anime and gaming districts in the world. Time Out Tokyo’s Akihabara guide is actually pretty accurate if you want a realistic overview instead of influencer hype.
Nakano Broadway Felt More Real Than Akihabara
If Akihabara feels commercial, Nakano Broadway feels personal.
The building itself honestly looks kind of outdated from the outside. Inside too, in some parts. But once you start walking around, you realize why collectors love it so much.
A lot of the stores feel untouched. Old display cases. Narrow hallways. Tiny specialty shops where the owner clearly knows every item sitting on the shelf. Some places sell rare animation cels. Others only retro toys. Others old manga magazines. You can spend hours there without realizing it. The weird thing about Nakano Broadway is that it does not really feel designed for tourists even though tourists go there constantly now. It still feels like a place built for people deep into the hobby already.
That changes the atmosphere completely. Outside the building is good too. Small restaurants, older shopping streets, random cafés. Less of the giant-screen Tokyo vibe people usually imagine before visiting Japan.
Ikebukuro Feels Different From Akihabara
A lot of people visiting Japan for the first time only focus on Akihabara, but Ikebukuro ended up being one of my favorite areas instead.
It feels younger somehow. There are still anime stores everywhere, but the vibe is less “electronics district” and more fandom culture in general. Character cafés, pop-up events, giant Animate stores, cosplay shops, collaboration campaigns happening constantly around the station area.
Otome Road especially feels different from most anime areas people outside Japan know about. There is a much bigger focus on female fandom culture there compared to Akihabara. Also, Ikebukuro just feels more active at night. Akihabara sometimes empties out earlier than people expect. Ikebukuro keeps moving longer.
Osaka’s Den Den Town Deserves Way More Attention
Most anime tourists stay focused on Tokyo, but Den Den Town in Osaka is honestly underrated.
It reminds me a bit of old Akihabara from years ago. The stores feel less corporate. The streets are quieter. You still find random secondhand shops that look like they have been operating the exact same way forever. Some places barely even have proper signage outside.
That is usually where the best finds happen though. The retro game stores around Den Den Town were probably my favorite part. Half the fun is that you genuinely do not know what you are going to run into walking upstairs into random buildings. It feels less optimized for tourists compared to parts of Tokyo, which honestly makes it more fun.
Some tips for my fellow manga heads before visiting Japan
One thing that surprised me during my trips was how many smaller places in Japan still rely heavily on phone calls. Not the big chains obviously. I mean smaller cafes, hobby stores, capsule hotels, event spaces, themed restaurants, older businesses like that.
Some barely answer emails. Some never reply on Instagram. Some reservation systems are confusing unless you speak Japanese. A few places literally just tell you to call. That becomes very relevant very quickly if you are planning anime-related trips, café bookings, figure pickups, or trying to confirm whether some collaboration event is still happening.
I ended up finding guides like this one about calling Japan cheaply surprisingly useful because roaming internationally gets expensive fast, especially if you are making multiple short calls during travel planning. Also this guide on where to find best anime themed food was pretty good too.
It sounds like an old-school problem until you are standing outside a tiny building in Tokyo trying to figure out whether the shop is actually open.
The Best Parts Usually Weren’t the Famous Parts
That was probably the biggest thing I noticed after spending time in these areas.
The most memorable places were usually not the giant tourist spots everyone already posts online. It was random side streets. Tiny stores. Old staircases covered in faded posters. Shops with almost no English signage. Small arcades hidden above convenience stores. Anime culture in Japan feels like infrastructure sometimes. It is just built into certain neighborhoods completely.
And honestly, that is probably why people keep wanting to go back.