Japan's WORST Tourist Scam Explained | $6,000 Lost in a Day

SdĂ­let
VloĆŸit
  • čas pƙidĂĄn 20. 05. 2024
  • Japan is one of the safest countries in the world. But even then it's not free from scams. We explore two of the worst.
    🎉 Get 3 Months FREE on Express VPN: www.expressvpn.com/abroadinjapan
    Discover how to get 3 months free at the LINK above! Thanks to sponsoring today's video.
    🎧 Abroad in Japan Podcast: hyperurl.co/nhgr30
    🍿 BEHIND the scenes Patreon: goo.gl/NWEoQm
    00:00 How Safe is Japan REALLY?
    04:05 Scam #1 - A Real Tokyo Horror Story
    11:40 Scam #2 - A Cult in Japan
    *FOLLOW THE ADVENTURE*
    â–ș Facebook: / abroadinjapan
    â–ș Twitter: / abroadinjapan
    â–ș Instagram: @abroadinjapan
    *EQUIPMENT I USE*
    â–ș MAIN Camera: amzn.to/2HSSdmy
    â–ș INDOOR Lens: amzn.to/2jyPOPm
    â–ș OUTDOOR Lens: amzn.to/2rnAt7O
    â–ș FAVOURITE Lens: amzn.to/2jwqyJm
    â–ș BACKUP Camera: amzn.to/2jvhILY
    â–ș STABILISED Camera: amzn.to/2HR3ljI
    Business Enquiries: talent@tokyocreative.jp
  • ZĂĄbava

Komentáƙe • 7K

  • @AbroadinJapan
    @AbroadinJapan  Pƙed rokem +3135

    NOTIFICATION SQUAD: I honestly regret not talking about this sooner on Abroad in Japan. But hopefully if we can prevent just a few of you from enduring it, it'll make up for it.
    But what's the WORST scam you've encountered inside or outside Japan? SHARE your wisdom below!

  • @1983simi
    @1983simi Pƙed rokem +3803

    general rule that holds true with tourism anywhere: you never ever go with the person who approaches you, doesn't matter if it's cab drivers, guys in front of clubs, store owners, etc... they don't need to drag you in if they're legit.

    • @SnoodyMcFlude
      @SnoodyMcFlude Pƙed rokem +109

      Not even to the seedy backroom strip club at a bar in Riga where the bloke said everyone coming out had "BIG smiles!!!" and that it was all "lovely jubbly"? I mean, I said no at the time but it's one of my biggest regrets in life that I didn't go to see what was behind the curtain.

    • @lachlank.8270
      @lachlank.8270 Pƙed rokem

      The 2nd woman would have skinned n stuffed Chris i guarantee it

    • @zam023
      @zam023 Pƙed rokem +146

      There is an easier solution, but no one wants it... JUST DON"T DRINK ALCOHOL.

    • @koffing2073
      @koffing2073 Pƙed rokem +11

      just not for tourism but its true for every salesperson

    • @giordanobruno6180
      @giordanobruno6180 Pƙed rokem +163

      @@zam023 you do know they can drug the water and the juice don't you? Or should one not leave home ever?
      There is a easy rule don't follow strangers... or one can be a puritan...

  • @Momo_1412
    @Momo_1412 Pƙed rokem +6944

    My favourite part about the woman who stopped Chris on the cycle has always been the idea that she knew exactly how to lure a British man into a trap
.. biscuits. Great video as always, nothing wrong with alerting people to dangers especially ones aimed at tourists

    • @jadeandblood
      @jadeandblood Pƙed rokem +404

      We all know it's only a matter of time before she pulled out the tea, then Chris really couldn't leave. Good thing he did!!

    • @EggsForDessert
      @EggsForDessert Pƙed rokem +128

      If a cult involved tea and biscuits they can have my unwavering dedication and loyalty.

    • @tripel7470
      @tripel7470 Pƙed rokem +146

      Little did she know she was just one piece of familymarkt fried chicken away from luring Chris in

    • @Zylph
      @Zylph Pƙed rokem +59

      creepy serial killer vibes. lure them back with biscuits and pictures of previous victims.

    • @system3008
      @system3008 Pƙed rokem +14

      You gotta ask yourself how bad can a cult that deals In tea and biscuits be?

  • @hidetolaruku3671
    @hidetolaruku3671 Pƙed rokem +1943

    If something like this ever happens to you, NEVER tell your bank/card that you were scammed. Always tell then you LOST your card (or it got stolen) and you don't know anything about the transactions. This gives you a much higher chance of them cancelling the transactions.

    • @pyrometheus2
      @pyrometheus2 Pƙed rokem +91

      Right? There is no way a bank wouldn't work with you in this situation. That's the whole reason there is a fraud department and charge backs.

    • @josephsmith961
      @josephsmith961 Pƙed rokem +17

      That was my first thought. Someone robbed us last night. People are so naive, then they wonder why they're so easily scammed.

    • @cooltwittertag
      @cooltwittertag Pƙed rokem +144

      @@josephsmith961 blaming the victims

    • @snowangelnc
      @snowangelnc Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +101

      @@josephsmith961 It's not naive to be surprised that they have to make up an explanation because the bank doesn't consider it a robbery when somebody drugged them and then took their cards and used them while they were blacked out.

    • @josephsmith961
      @josephsmith961 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      @@snowangelnc If you don't understand how your financial instruments work, that's just being stupid. Had they read the rules of how the card works, they wouldn't have lost any money. They didn't bother to do that, which makes them one or the other, naive, or just plain stupid. I think stupid applies here more than naivete.

  • @linalenachan2189
    @linalenachan2189 Pƙed rokem +82

    I was unfortunately drugged at a bar in Roppongi, but since I was with about 10 burly men who were all worried about me passing out, the bar just pretended I was too drunk to be there and kicked me out to be picked up at the street. I am forever grateful to all my friends who took care of me until the next morning.

    • @ToxicToastRecords
      @ToxicToastRecords Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci +10

      That was your first mistake. I went to college in Japan, and my Japanese classmates told us, NEVER go to Roppongi. That's where the Yakuza and their hired help set up bars.

  • @officernealy
    @officernealy Pƙed rokem +5064

    A story about the time I stayed in Shinjuku. It was my last night there and I decided to spend it at the Golden Gai. On my way back to my hotel, I was bombarded by touts trying to get me to come into their scam bars but I was told to act like they're ghosts by my travel agent. There was this one swole tout who clearly did not take kindly to me ignoring them and he followed me up the block shouting slurs at me. I was scared out of my mind but suddenly, a guy in a suit up the road, smoking a cigarette walked out in front of us, arms crossed, and the tout was suddenly gone. He was clearly Yakuza and I'm not exactly sure why he stepped in to save me, but I still think about it.

    • @alexanderarmfelt4452
      @alexanderarmfelt4452 Pƙed rokem +1872

      He was protecting his territory, not trying to save you.

    • @no.7893
      @no.7893 Pƙed rokem +1111

      @@alexanderarmfelt4452 or maybe it was kazuma kiryu????????

    • @sergioorozco1087
      @sergioorozco1087 Pƙed rokem +1363

      I think he could've been the touts' boss and he was simply disapproving of the guys behavior since being loud and irate could drive away potential victims. Or like the other guy said, he was protecting his territory which the tout may have come too close to

    • @unterhau1102
      @unterhau1102 Pƙed rokem +300

      kazuma-chan saved your ass lmao

    • @shartsmcginty8056
      @shartsmcginty8056 Pƙed rokem +217

      KIRYU-CHAN!

  • @mikea5745
    @mikea5745 Pƙed rokem +844

    General rule of thumb in Japan:
    If an overly friendly person comes up to you in English, they want your money
    If an overly friendly person comes up to you in Japanese, they want you to join their cult/religion

    • @PoisonousPen
      @PoisonousPen Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +27

      Or they’re Natsuki 😅

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +4

      It they want you to eat some spiked tofu with who knows what. lol

    • @mica6676
      @mica6676 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +3

      yess, this is so true. I once went to a huge 2nd hand store and when my girlfriend and I came out, we had a mother and a child ask us in Japanese if we wanted to pray at their shrine because of the current tsunami situation in the south of the country. we expected them to just take us to a local shrine where we would go through the very common procedure of throwing coins into a box, clapping and bowing. Instead, they took us on a 40-minute train ride, up 20 stories of some skyscraper handed us a necklace and a booklet, where we spend the next 30 minutes sitting in a tatami room chanting some form of us religios song. Still the weirdest experience i've had on all of my trips to japan, but at least we got free icecream after 😂
      Edit: i was only haveway through the video when looking at the comments. So yeah, I guess I experienced this 2nd form of "scam" or religions recruitment xd We did not have to sign documents to join their ranks on the other hand....

    • @victoriakudry3127
      @victoriakudry3127 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci +2

      Fortunately I have to disagree with you.. I met a wonderful Japanese lady in Japan about 11:00 at night in the hotel laundry 😂. We met again the following day and enjoyed the whole day out doing sightseeing in Tokyo. She came and visited me in Australia for a month the following year and I joined her in Osaka in the family home for three weeks. I heard the most fantastic time!!!! We are still in touch and planning to get together again!!

    • @didyuknow
      @didyuknow Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

      is it any different at any country?

  • @BlackCampariBlue
    @BlackCampariBlue Pƙed rokem +251

    A similar scam went on in Budapest in Hungary (without the drugging). There is a CZcams channel that covered it. They heard about the scam and, with a hidden camera, let themselves be led into a bar, secretly filming the whole process. Their video actually got quite a media coverage in Hungary and the bar was closed down after that

    • @xxlCortez
      @xxlCortez Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +23

      Sadly, in many cases, media pressure is the only way to get actions taken.

    • @mickanon5607
      @mickanon5607 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci +4

      only to re-open with a different name and exact same MO approximately 9 hours later.

    • @bernardoheusi6146
      @bernardoheusi6146 Pƙed měsĂ­cem +1

      Really? Source?

  • @JDoors
    @JDoors Pƙed rokem +1738

    Japan: We have low crime rate! Also Japan: Report a crime and you're told there's nothing they can do. Technically a lot of variation in crime statistics between countries actually reflects a difference in how crimes are reported.

    • @CubicSpline7713
      @CubicSpline7713 Pƙed rokem +70

      Also... 99% of all reported and followed up (by police) crimes are solved and result in prosecutions in Japan.
      Amazing eh?

    • @JDoors
      @JDoors Pƙed rokem +291

      @@CubicSpline7713 Key words "followed up." If the police tell you there's nothing they can do for crimes that may be difficult to bring to a conclusion, taking only the ones that can be readily resolved, yeah, that makes your "solved" rate look fantastic.

    • @WybjornVR
      @WybjornVR Pƙed rokem +3

      So true

    • @admthrawnuru
      @admthrawnuru Pƙed rokem +49

      @@CubicSpline7713 Improbably amazing, sounds like cherry-picking is involved.

    • @diseasedpumpkins5576
      @diseasedpumpkins5576 Pƙed rokem

      And police are useless.

  • @millennialchicken
    @millennialchicken Pƙed rokem +3731

    I've had to explain this to many others so I'll leave this here as well: Just because Japan has this ''squeaky clean'' image of crime doesn't mean that it isn't crime ridden or crime doesn't happen. It's just leagues & fathoms lower than many places elsewhere in the world.

    • @sunwukong5413
      @sunwukong5413 Pƙed rokem +287

      The more I look into it the more I start to call into question this belief. Crime isn't actually low just Japan is good at covering it up. There is no one to counter argue because police torture suspects for a false confession and have them locked up. It is extremely easy to get preyed upon in tourist spots and difficult to get out of when the criminals know the law. (or bribe police) Corruption is extremely common. Only recently Yakuza were running the streets and fighting in broad daylight. The problem is still there just better hidden.

    • @paranoidhumanoid
      @paranoidhumanoid Pƙed rokem +127

      @@sunwukong5413 But in terms of overall crime, it's substantially a world of difference than in say another G7 nation like the US or the UK. There were 45,000 shooting deaths in the US in 2021 alone -- there were barely 30 since 2016 in Japan. There's no comparison (or excuse) for modern, industrialized countries like the UK, US, and Japan. There's car jackings _daily_ in Philadelphia, Houston, Dallas, LA, and NYC. It's a *DAILY* occurrence.

    • @whyamiwastingmytimeonthis
      @whyamiwastingmytimeonthis Pƙed rokem +63

      @@sunwukong5413 _[citation needed]_

    • @user-ee8jj9pc9i
      @user-ee8jj9pc9i Pƙed rokem +49

      @@sunwukong5413
      You know nothing, that's "your desire".
      I know that you have not gone to japan.

    • @carlosleonardo88
      @carlosleonardo88 Pƙed rokem +8

      A sseth_tzeentach avatar?
      An individual of culture we have here.

  • @oaktree__
    @oaktree__ Pƙed rokem +791

    That first story is terrifying... not only were they scammed, they were robbed. Not only were they robbed, they were drugged and sexually assaulted. ON THEIR HONEYMOON. Beyond awful.

    • @SkyeAten
      @SkyeAten Pƙed rokem +149

      And the cops did nothing!! That's the part that made it so, so much worse for me. They simple don't even care that those things are going on.

    • @rhn6075
      @rhn6075 Pƙed rokem +124

      @@SkyeAten which is very ironic because there are an overabundance of policemen in Japan, but none of them are useful when we need them.

    • @ShadowZZZ
      @ShadowZZZ Pƙed rokem +25

      I agree, this is incredibly sad and tragic. These scammers the biggest assholes, they deserve to be found and jailed. Its crazy the police did nothing, I would be furious

    • @frostyblade8842
      @frostyblade8842 Pƙed rokem +95

      @@ShadowZZZ Yeah the police in Japan have a tendency to assume foreigners are at fault in most things, so they usually ignore most crimes that only affect foreigners, which is a shame

    • @ej_tech
      @ej_tech Pƙed rokem +36

      I'm also surprised by the response of that credit card company, which is nothing.
      That's supposed to be a chargeback and an immediate replacement of their credit card.

  • @solarguy1702
    @solarguy1702 Pƙed rokem +98

    The one and only time I was scammed in Japan was after stepping off the airport bus in Shinjuku. Pouring down rain. Guy in a big Cadillac asked me what hotel I was going to. I told him and he said he'd take us for „1000. He loaded our bags, we got in the car, he pulled a U turn and stopped. Ok, we're here. The hotel was directly across the street. More of a "taking advantage of" than a scam I guess.

    • @akadopeboi
      @akadopeboi Pƙed rokem +35

      looool finessed. That bastard.

    • @yutterbomb
      @yutterbomb Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +3

      😂😂😂

    • @soadsam
      @soadsam Pƙed měsĂ­cem +3

      lol the sucks but in all fairness at least they only took you for 1000 yen which isnt bad

  • @ExodeusIS
    @ExodeusIS Pƙed rokem +229

    I've got a similar story to the first one. 2005 mine and my brothers first trip of two to Japan. We are out on the town in this big club called vanilla on 3 floors, I went to the bar to get a drink come back and he is gone from the standing table thing where I left him, I thought he had just gone to find a bathroom so I finish my drink and dance some and he doesn't show up I look for him for a bit and then an hour or so I go back to the hotel thinking he will show up, well at 4 in the morning there is a knock on the door there he is barely standing with a cab driver behind him, the cab driver explains he could not pay for the cab but promised I would so I get him in the room go get some money pay the cabbie, I wrestle out of my brother that he lost his card and so I go down to the lobby and get to make a call back to Iceland to Visa and tell them my brother has lost his card and they need to close it, his card had been maxed out but unlike those unlucky ppl in the video visa cancelled most of the charges from the night. But the story doesn't end there I get informed in the morning that someone had called the hotel around noon demanding to speak to my brother giving the room number and name. The hotel staff that I talked to in the night said to them there must be some mistake to that person and that the info did not match, we were then moved to a different room and put under a different name. Needless to say there was quite a bit less nightlife in our trip after this traumatic experiance.

    • @Shrimpyyyyyyyy
      @Shrimpyyyyyyyy Pƙed rokem +4

      That’s awful!

    • @kewtheii6764
      @kewtheii6764 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +16

      seriously though, the staff is such a huge saviour!

  • @peterrogers6267
    @peterrogers6267 Pƙed rokem +1442

    Literally the exact same thing happened to my cousin in Roppongi with around $4k total across 4-5 transactions for be below the amount that usually triggers banks to fraud. Same thing happened, cops had zero interest in getting to the bottom of it. No report lodged, not showing on the reports
 BUT, lucky for him, I speak fluent Japanese and lost my shit at the police, got them to put together a report, which then was given to the bank to lodge the fraudulent access claim, which led to him getting his money back. đŸ‘đŸ» Hot tip: get a report saying that there was a violation!

    • @vilena5308
      @vilena5308 Pƙed rokem +126

      "Hot tip: get a report saying that there was a violation!"
      That was my thought after hearing the first story.
      Without it, the bank would probably do nothing.

    • @bikkiikun
      @bikkiikun Pƙed rokem +169

      VERY important info... embarrass the Police into writing a report. Tell them you will lodge a complaint against them, if they don't do their job.

    • @rin__
      @rin__ Pƙed rokem +29

      @@vilena5308 How do you get the report? Is there a specific information that we need to provide? I’ve always thought that if the police refuse to help then there’s nothing we can do đŸ« 

    • @TerryFojas
      @TerryFojas Pƙed rokem +150

      It happened to my coworkers visiting Japan for business. There were 5 them in a bar with a total bill of about 12K USD. They all used their credit cards just to be able to get out of the bar manned by Nigerians. Then they all call their banks (individually, no group drinking happened, cards were from different banks) and claimed that they have lost their card a few hours prior to the scam. They all got their charges reversed. Sometimes you just have to tell the bank a different story.
      When I travel, I always have a "scam" credit card for the scammers. I was scammed in Budapest, Paris, Amsterdam recently in small amounts but get all my money back.

    • @vilena5308
      @vilena5308 Pƙed rokem +102

      @@rin__ This depends on the country. There should certainly be a complaint procedure: what to do if the police is not taking your report, you feel they are not providing all the information, they are dragging their feet, etc.
      When you are in a foreign country, it depends. If you are in Japan, and know Japanese well enough or have someone in the police who speaks English, you can push them, insist you are staying till the report is filed or tell them you want to file a complaint on them and ask what is the procedure.
      It also depends what's the situation overall. Honestly, in this case (first story), drugs, theft and molestation, I would have first contacted my embassy and asked them for help and advice how to proceed with the criminal charges.
      When I travel and stay in a foreign country, as a rule, I carry a printout with contact info of my country's embassy and I enter it in my phone as well.

  • @w.a.8829
    @w.a.8829 Pƙed rokem +770

    had this happen to me in kabukicho about seven years ago (spiked drinks, handsy hostesses, $2k charged to my card) - fortunately, my credit card provider reversed the entirety of the charge after calling the bar's listed phone number and finding it was disconnected (canadian banks are apparently quite benevolent at times)

    • @simonlemlem9759
      @simonlemlem9759 Pƙed rokem +98

      I hate our banks but they only thing that makes me proud about them is that they don't tolerate fraud, same thing happened with my friend but in different country and they got his money back

    • @w.a.8829
      @w.a.8829 Pƙed rokem +18

      @@astrothelad had they called the bar and reached a legitimate establishment with a proprietor who could confirm the charge, they likely would not have reversed it, particularly because i didn't bother filing a police complaint.

    • @dragonfly9821
      @dragonfly9821 Pƙed rokem +11

      The first time I went to Japan my bank preemptively blocked my card because "someone" was suddenly spending so much in a foreign country far away from mine, and it seemed suspicious to them. I had to call them to tell them that it was me acting like I'm rich (when I'm not).

    • @BanBanChi
      @BanBanChi Pƙed rokem +22

      ​@@astrothelad I was an investigator for a credit card company for 13 years until recently. My job was literally investigating cases like the first story. US, Canadian and Australian law require that the banks provide a dispute process to argue suspicious transactions. The review process is much more than just a phone call to the business. On top of that, in the rare case the bank allows the charge, VISA, AMEX and MasterCard all give the customer the opportunity to request a deeper investigation through them directly.
      So the victims in the first example either didn't do their diligence or are exaggerating the story.

    • @kairon156
      @kairon156 Pƙed rokem

      @@simonlemlem9759 Had my Gmail hacked a few years back and they took $115 through my PayPal. Thankfully I was able to go to my Canadian bank and get my money back after a few days of panic.
      I also added the finger parent verification to sign in with my phone.
      @Dragonfly hell my bank gets suspicious if I use a VPN so in cases like this I'm glad to have a Canadian bank.

  • @Reira_Newgate
    @Reira_Newgate Pƙed rokem +199

    This scam actually happened to me at my home university in Austria. I was sitting in a park when a japanese guy approached me and we had a very nice conversation. He told me that he is working for a company that holds an event at our biggest concert venue and invited me to come. He even said that famous artists from a TV show come and have a performance. I didn't have anything better to do that day and since he seemed really nice I thought "cool why not" and bought tickets for me and my boyfriend. When we got there we realized that the entire event was about religion and it was definitely a cult we were recruited for. So this kind of japanese scam can even reach you in your country.

    • @solitarelee6200
      @solitarelee6200 Pƙed rokem

      I got got by friggin MORMONS that way once, music concert my ass... never trust white boys on bicycles in America, even if they're not in the dang mormon uniform lmao...

    • @Taiyo_Jinja
      @Taiyo_Jinja Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +2

      Oh dear, I hope you are okay. Cults sure can be dangerous factions of belief and ideology.

    • @Reira_Newgate
      @Reira_Newgate Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +1

      @@Taiyo_Jinja sure I am fine..luckily nothing else happened and we only lost some money :)

  • @ranndomundead9112
    @ranndomundead9112 Pƙed rokem +55

    Moral of the story, Crime is very much alive and well in Japan. Its just hidden so perfectly that everyone is able to pretend it doesnt exist, including the cops.
    And in many cases, this is far more dangerous than situations in other countries.

    • @faustinuskaryadi6610
      @faustinuskaryadi6610 Pƙed rokem

      Pickpocketing is probably low but for other crimes is another story.

    • @elgatofelix8917
      @elgatofelix8917 Pƙed rokem +1

      Anybody who's heard of Yakuza shouldn't be surprised by this

    • @NaeniaNightingale
      @NaeniaNightingale Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

      @@elgatofelix8917 Every country have their own mafia or criminal group, America is just special having multiples xD

  • @jonel3596
    @jonel3596 Pƙed rokem +1640

    There is a Japanese youtuber who actually secretly recorded himself getting scammed and the yakuza threatening him with the police. He walked with the yakuza to a police station where the police did absolutely nothing at all until he forced their hand with video and audio proof of the whole situation. These scammers usually get off scot free just because the police don't like to "rock the boat" without 190% undoubtable proof of guilt..

    • @jaredf.6532
      @jaredf.6532 Pƙed rokem +201

      Oh yeah. I think his account name was "The Dark Side of Japan" or something like that and he does videos on the sketchy parts and stuff that goes on in Japan

    • @jonel3596
      @jonel3596 Pƙed rokem +23

      @@jaredf.6532 Thats the one!

    • @erms111
      @erms111 Pƙed rokem +1

      They really like their statistic of 99% conviction rate and will do anything to keep it like that. Such a joke.

    • @KILLKILLKILLKILLKILLKILLKILL
      @KILLKILLKILLKILLKILLKILLKILL Pƙed rokem +17

      Yes I remember that, it is a video I will remember certainly

    • @Mw_kwak
      @Mw_kwak Pƙed rokem +84

      From what I heard the Japanese police turns a blind eye to the Yakuza as long as they don't have any wars or any murders and keep smaller crimes off the street, sort of like a symbiotic relationshiop. Not sure how true that is but yeah...

  • @riingodesu
    @riingodesu Pƙed rokem +2081

    I was in Tokyo a few years ago with a friend and a street tout physically grabbed our arms when we walked by ignoring him. He tried to drag us away into the store (we're both small Asian girls). He only let go after my friend started screaming at him. He then let us go and shouted slurs/derogatory terms at us while everyone stared without helping. This happened in the middle of a crowded street during the day too. Love Japan and Tokyo but the street touts are honestly some of the worst scum I've ever encountered in any country.

    • @gnarlin4964
      @gnarlin4964 Pƙed rokem +299

      Why doesn't the Japanese police do anything about this? This has clearly become a systemic issue. Do you think they're being bribed?

    • @DragonEdge10
      @DragonEdge10 Pƙed rokem +319

      @@gnarlin4964 I imagine a societal image of it "not really being a crime" because nobody was hurt, as well as not wanting to step on anyones toes

    • @Darkrezta
      @Darkrezta Pƙed rokem +13

      @@gnarlin4964 the police might happen not close in there, so they are not aware something like these happen.

    • @mikelp9600
      @mikelp9600 Pƙed rokem +221

      @@DragonEdge10 not only does it have to do with that (unfortunately), but it also has to do with the fact that Japanese are really quiet and don't really engage socially with strangers. What we may think is "shyness" from their part is actually just their standard mindset of "I'm on my own, and everybody else is also. I'm just going to carry on with my day, I have nothing to do with other strangers".

    • @thenaivevigilante4379
      @thenaivevigilante4379 Pƙed rokem +216

      Staring while not helping definitely sounds like a Japan thing.

  • @avrilcuttecrap
    @avrilcuttecrap Pƙed rokem +401

    The "sect" story happened to me in Tokyo. I was walking out of the Tokyo SkyTree and an elderly women approached me. She asked me if I wanted to go see a temple. I was much in my yes-man phase, on a high honestly with everything in Tokyo. So said yes. Deep down I also cursed myself, would I be assassinated in japan and not in my home country?
    Anyway we walked for a bout 2 minutes before we reached a normal looking building. There, the elderly lady introduced me to 3 approx. 30 years old women, only one of them spoke enough English to get around so it was more a game of telephone with the other two. They were really lovely.
    They took me inside, gave me a book of prayer and a set of beads (which I still have!). The shrine was pretty I have to admit. We sat on some office chairs and a prayer started. One of the women pointed at the words while they were being chanted so could follow along. Then they took me to a small tatami room where a monk was waiting. I think he baptized me??? I will never know. I just remember they were impressed with my seiza. lol Never was money mentioned once. (Which was surprising)
    After the whole ordeal, I explained I was going to go back home, that I would stop somewhere to have supper alone, since I was travelling on my own. One of the 3 women wouldn't have it and off we were the four of us in a family restaurant (my first time there and not my last!). I got to know them more, after the meal, we exchanged line and I was off to bed with a nice story to tell. But it's not over!
    At another point of my trip I was back in Tokyo, the ladies asked me if I wanted to go visit their 'main' temple, thinking about it now, I can't remember for the life of m where it was but they actually RENTED a car and took me along. It was outside of Tokyo, we drove for a while. There, we got to sit n the biggest golden room I ever been into, I think there were at least a thousand people or so. After the prayer, we had lunch on the premises and then they drove me back! Once again, no money was ever discussed!
    I think i saw them once more ate that for dinner, I gotta say, really amazing and selfless people! I'll never know what their deal was beside allowing me a good time haha! Wherever they are, I hope they're well :)

    • @derp195
      @derp195 Pƙed rokem +174

      Excellent story, but my favorite part was the implication that you know you're going to be assassinated somewhere, and you were upset that it looked like it wasn't going to be at home.

    • @napoleonfeanor
      @napoleonfeanor Pƙed rokem +49

      Have you tried finding out about it by asking other Japanese people? You had their LINE so with the help of a Japanese speaker, you can find out.
      My guess is that they are some new religious group trying to convert people without bad intention. Basically missionaries. MAny Christians also do this but usually not to people who they cannot communicate with.

    • @alexanderchenf1
      @alexanderchenf1 Pƙed rokem +2

      Very interesting

    • @Erlaxis
      @Erlaxis Pƙed rokem

      Be wary of this kind of stories. They are easily fabricated. Use your common sense always while traveling.

    • @MrLAli-ro5ir
      @MrLAli-ro5ir Pƙed rokem +13

      feels nice to read a story with a happy ending, thought that assassination was inevitable as I kept reading hahahaha

  • @catbjorndestroyerofworlds8108

    when i was in japan there were some people trying to get my whole group into a bar and they tried like 4 times theyre very persistent and they even tried to offer us a free round of drinks if we went in the 3rd time, funny everything you said about that scam was exactly what happened and im glad i avoided it even though the guys in my group were happy to take him up i convinced them to follow me away.
    the same night my friends insisted on going to this club, we went and when my friend went with one of the strippers in the back she actually took his wallet out of his pocket while he wasnt paying attention and put it in her purse, luckily my friend was ballsy enough to just open her purse in front of her to check, but i know most people myself included wouldnt have done that and just assumed i lost it before that, definitely be careful, if something feels shady it doesnt matter how safe the country is it probably is shady
    This was on okinawa

  • @bikkuridesu2407
    @bikkuridesu2407 Pƙed rokem +838

    I was almost caught out by a street tout. This happened about 7 years ago and had only been in Japan for about a week. I had missed my last train and was in Chiba city, so was waiting outside the station for the earliest one (I was very very drunk). Someone came up and started chatting, a friendly dude supposedly from Colombia. Anyway we chatted for like 30 minutes about Japan and family and stuff, he seemed like a genuinely cool dude (although I had heard of the street touts, it hadn't at all crossed my mind with him).
    So we got walking whilst chatting, (sure beat the hell out of sitting outside the station) and then suddenly he said "Hey, actually I know this bar that's still open we could go to, you wanna go?" and red flags started jumping around in my head. Trying to be friendly I was like "Okay, sure!" whilst trying to fight my sobering brain cells screaming at me to get away as soon as possible.
    We got to a fairly busy crossroad where there was another foreigner standing around who gave the Colombian dude strong eye contact, then a big smile, and they high fived. That confirmed what was going on, and I realised we must be close and it was now or never. I said to him, "Sorry, you know what, I've got to go." So I turned around and started walking the other way. He ran back to me and grabbed my arm tightly (not exactly what I was expecting), and said to me, "Hey you need a drink or some food?" and dragged me into a 7eleven right next to us. He was gripping pretty tight, but I didn't want to get into a fight and possibly end up in a koban for the rest of the night, so I allowed him to drag me into the 7eleven. He was saying "You want a coke, a sandwich?", he grabbed a bottle of coke from the fridge and walked me over to the till. At that point I thought I was in a pretty safe environment with cameras etc, so I jolted my arm from his grip and briskly walked out. He didn't follow, probably because he was still holding a bottle of coke at the till.
    When you're in Japan for the first time, you definitely can let your guard down due to how friendly people can seem, and how trusting people can be. I've now reverted back to my British cynicism though.

    • @NJ12345413
      @NJ12345413 Pƙed rokem +25

      That’s certainly quite scary but I must say, the bloke didn’t fail for lack of commitment.

    • @Alexacardcaptors
      @Alexacardcaptors Pƙed rokem +55

      I don't usually leave comments on You Tube, but I couldn't help it after reading your message. I am very sorry that this happened to you. As a Colombian, I feel deeply ashamed that there are always malicious people who give a bad reputation to our nation (more than what is already historically known). đŸ€ŠđŸœâ€â™€đŸ€ŠđŸœâ€â™€đŸ€ŠđŸœâ€â™€đŸ€ŠđŸœâ€â™€ And to anyone reading this message, not all Colombians are bad people or criminals. Unfortunately for us, it is an invisible yoke that all citizens carry whether we want to or not when we live abroad because of the bad reputation that some bastards have created.

    • @sebastiantorres1358
      @sebastiantorres1358 Pƙed rokem +25

      As a Colombian I am so sorry that you went through this experience and am glad that you made it out ok . We are not all bad even though the media usually portrays otherwise. We have our good and bad people just like every other nation

    • @sierrasix4068
      @sierrasix4068 Pƙed rokem

      You are weak

    • @melissac.5919
      @melissac.5919 Pƙed rokem +1

      That last sentence made it for me! xD

  • @Bianca_Toeps
    @Bianca_Toeps Pƙed rokem +1105

    A Dutch journalist once made a series in which he intentionally got scammed in different countries to show the practices. He also got himself into one of these Tokyo bars (and saved a tourist). The episode is on youtube (auto translate subs works pretty well): "Oplichters in het Buitenland - S04E01 Deel 1/5 - Tokyo"

    • @JadeStaze1
      @JadeStaze1 Pƙed rokem +21

      Kees van der spek 😍😍

    • @daveyp2tm
      @daveyp2tm Pƙed rokem +24

      ooh thanks for this, will make a good follow up watch

    • @HRM.H
      @HRM.H Pƙed rokem +42

      definitely a good program , he's gotten tons of scammers arrested before.

    • @obiarne
      @obiarne Pƙed rokem +6

      Danku voor de suggestie

    • @TheWhiteGyrfalcon
      @TheWhiteGyrfalcon Pƙed rokem +2

      I've seen that guy and show!! Great

  • @snowingsniper
    @snowingsniper Pƙed rokem +3

    That set is truly amazing,you did a excellent job on it

  • @emilyhughes9879
    @emilyhughes9879 Pƙed rokem +190

    I had a really scary experience in harajuku when I was there on a school trip many years ago. Our teacher gave us time to explore and I was with two girls that I wasn't really friends with. This really shady looking guy invited us to his T-shirt shop which had 'many more sizes and styles' than the few on a rack he was standing beside. The girls I was with quickly took his offer even though I tried to tell them not to. I ended up going with them out of fear that something would happen to them if I didn't, he led us down an alleyway and up several flights of stairs into this room with no windows filled with T-shirits and a BIG and HEAVY looking door. The other two walked straight in but I planted myself in the doorway leaning against the door on the wall.The dude looked SO pissed at me and several other workers tried to draw me away to look at their items. They sent us away and told us they're closing as soon as it became obvious I knew something fishy was up. So terrifying to think what might have happened if I didn't do that.

    • @dragonbone5000
      @dragonbone5000 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +6

      Actually doors look like that in Japan. It’s completely normal. All apartment and office doors etc, are metal and heavy looking. You probably didn’t know that if you were just there for a very short time.
      I am pretty sure that absolutely nothing would have happened to you. Harajuku has many hundreds of small little privately owned boutiques run from tiny apartments, with a clothing rail somewhere outside to attract customers.

    • @ssllsg9439
      @ssllsg9439 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +100

      @@dragonbone5000
      'I am pretty sure that absolutely nothing would have happened to you.'
      hooo boy.
      you thought being led into a windowless room by a stranger is not a big deal?
      not to mention that there are SEVERAL other 'workers' inside that windowless room???
      and all of a sudden,magically,that guy said that they are closing as soon as OP doesnt want to come in?(even though shes on a school trip,and free time to explore usually meant that its not late night or midnight?)
      theres plenty of red flags here,and you didnt think that anything is wrong here?
      im going to miss you when something bad happens to you.
      LOL!

    • @dragonbone5000
      @dragonbone5000 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +4

      @@ssllsg9439 not sure what ‘hoo boy’ refers to, as actually I am a female.

    • @ssllsg9439
      @ssllsg9439 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +77

      @@dragonbone5000
      'not sure what ‘hoo boy’ refers to, as actually I am a female.'
      and THIS is your main concern?
      youre not worried at all about your lack of common sense and awareness for your own safety?
      yep.
      my worries is justified.
      LOL!

    • @kingbolo4579
      @kingbolo4579 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +31

      I think you saved them from an experience they would have regretted for the rest of their lives.

  • @katrinachristian1449
    @katrinachristian1449 Pƙed rokem +551

    As a 16yr old on a school trip to Japan, we were warned about the touts beforehand. I looked a little older than my age and managed to attract the attention of a tout during our free time. I'm notoriously jumpy due to a childhood of jump scares from my cousin, so when he appeared behind me suddenly I shrieked. He apologised and made a very quick get away. Felt terrible that I'd hurt his feelings until our teacher reminded us what their job was.

    • @forgettmenot
      @forgettmenot Pƙed rokem +73

      Thank you for the screaming tip! That should actually work almost 100% of the time 😂

    • @DamnAwesome
      @DamnAwesome Pƙed rokem +24

      @@soldadogomez3811 wtf?

    • @x8Pukaluka8x
      @x8Pukaluka8x Pƙed rokem +10

      @@soldadogomez3811 dude wtf
 Get some help

    • @soldadogomez3811
      @soldadogomez3811 Pƙed rokem +5

      @@x8Pukaluka8x you too kid

    • @psychedelicpunk5031
      @psychedelicpunk5031 Pƙed rokem +7

      Damn, must be a nice school if you are getting a trip to Japan.

  • @kentpaynter1350
    @kentpaynter1350 Pƙed rokem +312

    It seems to me many tourists try to be too polite. With a tout, don't try to reason with them, say no and walk away. It's best to not even slow your pace, shake your head and keep walking. It's ok to be "rude" to them. I've never had a problem, lived in Tokyo for 10 years and have traveled all over the world.

    • @Laperdash
      @Laperdash Pƙed rokem +12

      If people would actually say no to anything they have the entire world at their feet and can do everything.

    • @woodsy.2977
      @woodsy.2977 Pƙed rokem +3

      I’ve had to be violent with touts because of them harassing me and my friends.

    • @danielarmstrong3963
      @danielarmstrong3963 Pƙed rokem +16

      You're completely right. I'v spent a reasonable amount of time in Egypt and you have to be like that on a daily basis.

    • @braulio09
      @braulio09 Pƙed rokem +7

      Yeah that's what I do in big cities. Just keep walking. If they follow I say no and don't reply

    • @Bunnybananabunny
      @Bunnybananabunny Pƙed rokem +8

      Yup! I just act like I don't even see them, not even a no😅

  • @Crittp
    @Crittp Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +3

    Literally got approached for this today and luckily my buddy had seen your video. 👍 Thanks mate.

  • @Ineedagoodscreenname
    @Ineedagoodscreenname Pƙed rokem +24

    I was warned to stay far away from Kubukicho by an uncle that lived in Japan. He said exactly what you said about the Nigerians. First day in Japan I had a yakuza guy grab me by the arm and tried to pull me into a sexual setting. It was pretty terrifying and I had to use force to get away. The other yakuza dude was laughing but I didn't find it all too funny. The whole trip I got bombarded by men and women trying to get me sexual favors for $50. You just have to be confident in saying NO. My second trip was a lot better since I brought my wife but then I got hassled by a monk trying to scam with beads and sob stories.

  • @lauriepenner350
    @lauriepenner350 Pƙed rokem +707

    I was at Dotonbori in Osaka when a Japanese schoolgirl came running up to me and asked to use my phone because she had to call her parents right away. I said sorry, my phone doesn't work here, which was the truth because I didn't have a Japanese SIM card. But the street was absolutely crowded with Japanese people, and I have to question why she would want to use the phone of the obvious tourist and not a local who spoke Japanese. I feel like I dodged some sort of bullet.

    • @EggsForDessert
      @EggsForDessert Pƙed rokem +75

      She probably just wanted your attention. Japanese kids still see foreigners as strange oddities even in the big cities.

    • @yokohamaborn
      @yokohamaborn Pƙed rokem +136

      Asking a stranger for a phone is awkward and embarrassing and some Japanese people feel more comfortable asking foreigners for such things because you are not viewed as part of Japanese society, and may be more likely to be open and understanding. But, we can only speculate.

    • @Yarnocalypso
      @Yarnocalypso Pƙed rokem +219

      This is a known scam where you unlock your phone, hand it to them, they call somebody, run away with your phone then basically they've stole your phone and can reset / sell it. it happens all over the world. It's always "I need to call my parents" because something has happened.

    • @lauriepenner350
      @lauriepenner350 Pƙed rokem +58

      @@Yarnocalypso Thank you for this info! It's good to know my scam-detector is working. Seriously though, who lets a complete stranger use their phone, even if it's a kid?

    • @TokyoXtreme
      @TokyoXtreme Pƙed rokem +53

      A Japanese schoolgirl could just go to a koban if there were such an emergency.

  • @Maverick2615
    @Maverick2615 Pƙed rokem +198

    The fact that your bank said that was an authorized transaction is BS. I would definitely look for another bank. It’s called claiming fraud for a reason.

    • @ReXiRa787
      @ReXiRa787 Pƙed rokem +10

      The scary thing is that in Japan, you don't even need to put in your pin for a transaction 😭

    • @synewparadigm
      @synewparadigm Pƙed rokem +6

      @@ReXiRa787 as in the US.

    • @ChikNoods
      @ChikNoods Pƙed rokem +50

      This is why you need to use a credit card. Your debit card is your money and the bank doesn't care. The credit card is their money and they will get it back. They will fight for their money

    • @eji
      @eji Pƙed rokem +6

      @@ChikNoods Yeah, I never used my debit card at all in japan, credit cards and their travel protections are really the way to go

  • @theery9614
    @theery9614 Pƙed rokem +55

    The scam with drugs in a bar probably happened to me last year in Roppongi. A tout came to me and started persuading me to come to a bar nearby. I was drunk and it was almost the end of my vacation so I was like yeah man let's do it (a bad idea). The bar was hidden on one of the upper floors of some building, and it was a classic hostess bar with everything as you'd expect - free drinks for you, expensive drinks for the girls that spend time entertaining you and ridiculously overpriced champagne (100k yen for a bottle or so). Well, at the beginning it was quite fun, but after a few more drinks I basically blacked out and I don't remember much afterwards. From the moments that I do remember, I know that I indeed felt like a zombie and had no control of what I was doing. I kinda remember using my card to buy the fucking champagne tho. At least a few times. Overall, my stupid little decision to go with the tout cost me around $3k and I have very little recollection of how I even got back to my hotel. Up until I saw this video I didn't realize there were may have been drugs involved, I thought that I just got too drunk. I've never experienced anything even close to this state though, so I'm quite confident some other substance was involved. I guess it could've ended up even worse, but I sure as hell won't be going with a tout anywhere ever again.

    • @peradean
      @peradean Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +4

      That's terrible. I'm sorry that happened. So sad really

  • @julialewis8573
    @julialewis8573 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

    THANK YOU! This is exceptionally helpful!

  • @tokyoarrow
    @tokyoarrow Pƙed rokem +261

    I live in Akasaka, one of the most prestigious and high tier addresses in Japan. Even here, drunk one night after drinking at my local, I was approached by a cute and friendly Taiwanese girl. After a short conversation where I told her about my travels in her country, she told me she’s working at a local bar and asked if I’d like to go.
    I thought why not, she seems nice and Akasaka has a great reputation, I’ve never had problems here before.
    She took me to her bar which looked sketchy as hell from minute one. I decided I would only stay for one drink, and the girl also asked for a drink and I said yes. After 30 minutes I came over very tired, and luckily I still had the consciousness to ask for the bill. Pretty much as I did so, another 2 girls entered carrying a clearly drunk and semi-conscious salary man who could not even walk or talk. Immediately they started ordering drinks for him and themselves even though he was basically unconscious. I was beginning to feel like I would be scammed. 2 drinks, one for me and one for the girl came to a whopping 60,000 yen (around $600). I said can I use the restroom first? They said okay. I ran home without paying, but fell unconscious half way in the side streets - in hindsight, I think I must have been drugged. I woke up hours later, a policeman had been tipped off about the unconscious gaijin in the neighborhood and had come to check on me. He took my ID and then helped me get home. My ankle was in a lot of pain. The next day I woke up to the most horrendous headache, much worse than the worst hangover I’ve ever had, and my left ankle was massively swollen and bruised.
    It took a few days for me to even get out of bed, but when I did get to a doctor he told me it’s lucky that my ankle wasn’t broken and it’s the worst sprain he’s ever seen. It took around 6 weeks to fully recover. I must have fallen hard on my ankle when I passed out, again I think I must have been drugged.
    Luckily, I made it out without losing any money. But even then, the sprain was hardly worth it. Don’t talk to touts!

    • @imepriimek2011
      @imepriimek2011 Pƙed rokem +23

      Holy shit! Good that you escaped before anything worse happened!

    • @DamnAwesome
      @DamnAwesome Pƙed rokem +14

      God damn that's horrible, I hope karma takes care of them!

    • @kanter6662
      @kanter6662 Pƙed rokem +2

      If you lived there why didn't you search for the bar afterwards? To make them trouble, or just write anonymous tip/review? Exact address name, even take photos

    • @roberts3423
      @roberts3423 Pƙed rokem +1

      Should have reported it to the police

    • @uwannakatana3990
      @uwannakatana3990 Pƙed rokem +7

      @@roberts3423 I live in Japan and stuff like that is actually legal what they don’t do is tell you about all the “hidden fees” like walking in the bar fee talking to the girls fee sitting down fee etc

  • @gajustempus
    @gajustempus Pƙed rokem +537

    in other words: If the police doesn't accept and record a crime, there's no crime added to the statistics. Therefore the statistics are insanely good. This however leads to more people believing crimes and rip-offs don't exist in Japan.
    I think I spot a pattern there

    • @a1r592
      @a1r592 Pƙed rokem +107

      Wait till you hear about the ‘near perfect’ conviction rate

    • @druegnor1703
      @druegnor1703 Pƙed rokem +23

      remind me of a village in Hot Fuzz

    • @celfhelp
      @celfhelp Pƙed rokem

      same pattern with a lot of government statistics all around the world
      that's (sadly) the way it goes

    • @RACH90810
      @RACH90810 Pƙed rokem +1

      Japan believes in forgiveness

    • @SpellFire
      @SpellFire Pƙed rokem +17

      Interesting point, but i still think its safer than most. Every country has its crooks. Heck, in japan someone had to make their own diy gun to shoot that ex japanese politician because they are practically non existent. But yeah, crime still does happen. :(

  • @hiddenwasabi
    @hiddenwasabi Pƙed rokem +33

    Thanks for the really great video. I experienced something similar to the cult story in Tokyo about a decade ago when I first moved to the city. It started at a friend's party, when I met someone who seemed cool to hang out with. We exchanged contact details, and some months later agreed to meet up for lunch at a family restaurant. All seemed perfectly normal, until a few of this person's friends joined us during the meal. Everyone was having good conversation, so it didn't seem strange that they proposed to continue the fun and go "for a coffee" at someone's apartment near by. When we got to the apartment, I found it filled with people chanting buddhist prayers and no sign of coffee, so I decided to make a speedy exit. The story ended with me dashing to the closest train station, with two of these people in close pursuit, shouting out things like "Wait! You don't understand. We can share the secret of true happiness". It was a quite scary at the time, and one of the most bizarre experiences I've ever had. Fortunately, I've never experienced anything else like that in my many years here.

    • @theHaru20
      @theHaru20 Pƙed rokem +15

      Nothing like being chased and screamed at to make you feel safe and on your way to true happiness đŸ€Ł

  • @c.s.7993
    @c.s.7993 Pƙed rokem +10

    It's astonishing there are so many people who are completely comfortable with harming others.

  • @sidewithwerewolves
    @sidewithwerewolves Pƙed rokem +105

    The drugging happened to me in Tokyo. I called my bank and had the charges reversed by saying "I got charges from a company that doesn't exist on Google. This is fraud."

    • @murry001
      @murry001 Pƙed rokem +7

      Huh, do companies HAVE to exist on google?

    • @sidewithwerewolves
      @sidewithwerewolves Pƙed rokem +27

      @@murry001 no but it helps you tell your bank its a fraud if they can't find it they will believe the fraud charges. 4000k was swiped from mine and i still had 2 weeks to go in singapore on only $500 cash.

    • @kazmaBlends
      @kazmaBlends Pƙed rokem +14

      @@sidewithwerewolves yeah the main isuue with the victims is they acknowledged the existence of the place and the fact that they were there...if you tell your bank this is a fraud charge I wasnt there they would most likely take the charge back specially if it doesn't fit your shop profile.

    • @selpharessecret3899
      @selpharessecret3899 Pƙed rokem +3

      @@kazmaBlends not to mention that puts them in a position to prove that you were there.

  • @Soosane
    @Soosane Pƙed rokem +158

    I had to report 2 assaults in Japan and they essentially bully you into not reporting and saying reporting won’t do anything since I didn’t have any substantial proof. Oh I had to persist to submit a report for 2 hours before they caved and let me. But not after berating me and making me talk through and act out what had happened. Gross police work.

    • @galamotshaku
      @galamotshaku Pƙed rokem +90

      I guess that's how the keep the crime statistics low

    • @robertnomok9750
      @robertnomok9750 Pƙed rokem +53

      @@galamotshaku Exactly. Just like in South Korean police ignores your peports, mocks you and etc. You HAVE to know legal basis for you actions beforehand to force them register you case and give you report number. That would allow you to file a complaint in case they try to avoid invistigation. And many other little trick you have to know. Otherwise you get nothing.
      There is not crime if there is not case registered, right? And lets not forget about society shaming victims of harrasment and sexual assault. yeah, yeah. japanese police develops alarm application, creates seminars about that but its nothing more than a cute dressing.

    • @crswro1690
      @crswro1690 Pƙed rokem

      as safe as japan seems to be, its not because of a robust police force. Police in japan are about as useful as nipples on men.

    • @crswro1690
      @crswro1690 Pƙed rokem +9

      @@robertnomok9750 can confirm. lived in korea for a year. only thing i saw the KNP do was knock around a few drunks when it was closing time.

    • @sunoverbeach
      @sunoverbeach Pƙed rokem

      Having lived in Japan, I can honestly say that the Japanese Police are the most useless police force in the world. They are essentially cosplayers in police outfits. Whenever I visit Japan I avoid them like the plague.

  • @Lisapizzza
    @Lisapizzza Pƙed rokem

    Love the podcast, British Pete and you are great to listen to!

  • @lisaleone2296
    @lisaleone2296 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +12

    I'm sure this is going to be a hot take -- I don't drink alcohol when I travel. It would be nice if I could "trust" that the places I'm going to are safe, but there are BAD people out there even in the best hotels. The only way to be safe is to avoid situations where someone could take advantage of you, and abstaining is a big step you can take to make yourself less of a target. The bad actors know that once you've voluntarily had a few, it will be hard if not impossible for you to get them in any trouble for taking advantage of you. Sad but true.

  • @meapineapple2383
    @meapineapple2383 Pƙed rokem +314

    If you think about it. Japan would be the perfect place for a scam. Your guard is down and you think you are going to be ok because you hear how safe it is. Just know your surroundings and be safe out there!

    • @spicybeantofu
      @spicybeantofu Pƙed rokem

      It's safe cause no one reports crimes and when you try the police don't care

    • @GambitsEnd
      @GambitsEnd Pƙed rokem

      It's also a great place for a scam because the police don't care about foreigners. Scam all the tourists you want.

    • @NJ12345413
      @NJ12345413 Pƙed rokem

      I think Japan does have a lot of scams directed at the every growing elderly population there.

    • @stubru16
      @stubru16 Pƙed rokem +1

      can understand why Nigerians Iraqis and Albanians are trafficked to the UK in boats because they will be working illegally in a factory or a scam in London. I don’t think it just happens in Japan

    • @deus_ex_machina_
      @deus_ex_machina_ Pƙed rokem +36

      Plus people on holiday tend to leave their brain at home...

  • @doolallyshake64
    @doolallyshake64 Pƙed rokem +889

    The fact that the police didn't care when those two got robbed and sexually molested/assaulted is a great highlight of the Japanese policing and justice system. It's terrible. And the reason they can be is because of low crime rates due to culture etc. But it definitely needs improving.

    • @davidb2206
      @davidb2206 Pƙed rokem

      They are paid off and part of it. Same as Thailand. It's just an extra income scheme for them. You are viewed as dumb and a sucker to fall for it.

    • @almisami
      @almisami Pƙed rokem +125

      Japan's police mandate is to "maintain peace", not necessarily "enforce the law".
      Therefore, taking out the crooks they know predate primarily on tourists and creating a power vacuum is probably viewed as more endangering to the "peace" than letting them do their thing.

    • @TheZombie2415
      @TheZombie2415 Pƙed rokem +51

      Yeah, that's why it's best to avoid getting into trouble in Japan.
      And IIRC Japan back in pre 2000s is known to their notorious crime and modern society only change how they work.
      While every country can have corrupt police, Police in Japan can be irresponsible as they get when it comes to such matters.

    • @Kitsunegi
      @Kitsunegi Pƙed rokem +88

      The thing most ppl don't know about the japan low criminal rate is that it don't include
      sexual misconduct/assault on women's (if it did it will be like 3 or so in the world).
      So most women's report if considered at all are 4 or 6 in the priority list. property law is #3 on the list so most get under the rug with the usual excuse if you don't know the guy why you talked/replied to him so you're the one who prompted the incident type of reply.
      also the cultural fact that you need to keep quiet and don't bother ppl/family with your problem don't help eighter

    • @mandeep3.14
      @mandeep3.14 Pƙed rokem +56

      That’s alarming as a woman. So their low crime rate probably isn’t right. I wonder if the police in any country is actually good or at the bare minimum.

  • @janmarkovic254
    @janmarkovic254 Pƙed rokem +46

    My general rule: If someone aproaches me on the street, he is probably a scamer. When he asks something, I alway reply in my native tongue: "JĂĄ vĂĄm vĆŻbec nerozumim!" wich means - "I dont understand you at all" in Czech. They usualy go: "Eh?" Maybe sometimes repeat and then leave. What can you do with someone ho you dont understand? Fun fact: once I answered a tout in Morocco this way and he replied also in czech. I gave him some tip because I was amazed and he earned it. From that time I try this on every stranger or tout in foreign country and if they answer me right I give them money. But that never happened again. Sadly. For them. Hahaha!

    • @fjodorf7341
      @fjodorf7341 Pƙed rokem +10

      Funny story but also why the hell would you tip a kidnapping gangster jesus

    • @Brynjar101
      @Brynjar101 Pƙed rokem

      I do the same thing just in Icelandic it works like a charm

    • @yourmum69_420
      @yourmum69_420 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@fjodorf7341 not everyone in the street is a kidnapping gangster lmao

    • @tonywilcox3311
      @tonywilcox3311 Pƙed rokem +3

      This is the only use I have found for the Welsh language. It gets rid of scammers everywhere in the world

    • @eniff2925
      @eniff2925 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

      Even if they ask me the time I answer I don't know.

  • @MyEmpireOfDirt
    @MyEmpireOfDirt Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +45

    I have heard from military friends that Roponggi is off-limits all because of the Nigerian bar scammers. There are even "neighborhood watch" people standing around in yellow reflective vests near these bars. How has Japan allowed this to continue???

    • @Chestyfriend
      @Chestyfriend Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

      Because they're mostly scamming dumb foreigners I guess.

    • @matheusp572
      @matheusp572 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

      At best the police rather to pretend it doesn’t happens or blame foreigners instead of do something and risking tarnishing their reputation. At worse they are into it.

    • @Vercingetorixeur
      @Vercingetorixeur Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +8

      Japan will probably experience more diversity now that their people are dying en masse. As a European I can tell it won't be good.

    • @McDLT999999999999999
      @McDLT999999999999999 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

      DEI = DIE

    • @FNLNFNLN
      @FNLNFNLN Pƙed měsĂ­cem

      @@Vercingetorixeur Just grow some balls and say you don't like black people. For real, who do you think you're fooling?

  • @WarpRulez
    @WarpRulez Pƙed rokem +371

    I think the same precaution applies in _any_ country: If some stranger comes to you and asks you to follow him or her somewhere, politely decline. There's literally zero reason why that would ever be a good idea.

    • @theseb1979
      @theseb1979 Pƙed rokem +19

      Of course. None of these scams listed in the video are unique to Japan. They happen in all major cities.

    • @CyrussNP
      @CyrussNP Pƙed rokem

      So very true, though in my case following a stranger in Japan actually worked out for the best.

    • @A.Darmoyo
      @A.Darmoyo Pƙed rokem

      @@CyrussNP how ?

    • @elgatofelix8917
      @elgatofelix8917 Pƙed rokem

      Well this is easy. The people I'm not supposed to trust are b|ek? I'm already one step ahead of you.

  • @dark_knight109
    @dark_knight109 Pƙed rokem +380

    I'm glad you mentioned this, Chris. In 2019, I took a month-long trip to Japan (not my first, but my most extensive) and I had some of your stories in mind when I did. Good thing, too, because when I was visiting Hirosaki, Aomori during the Neputa Matsuri, I'm pretty sure I was targeted by one of these scams. I was on my own, exploring the area around Hirosaki castle, when a young man about my age comes up to me on the street and strikes up a conversation. As you mentioned, this isn't really something that happens in Japan, so I was already a bit confused, but he seemed nice enough. He asked me the same questions you listed - where I was from, what I was doing in Japan - and when he found out I was there for the festival, he said, "My town has a festival going on too. I would like to take you there." Immediately I thought about your experience with the woman in Niigata and politely declined, doing my best to end the conversation as fast as possible and making up a BS reason that I had to go meet some friends back at my hotel (figured he was less likely to do anything weird if he thought people were expecting me). Eventually he gave me a pamphlet for some sort of religious movement and left (still saved it as a souvenir).
    These types of stories are very helpful for foreigners going to visit, just so we can be aware of what to look for. If I hadn't heard from you and Sharla about some of these scams that target foreigners, it likely never would have crossed my mind.

    • @bikkiikun
      @bikkiikun Pƙed rokem +45

      People in Japan don't "just come up and talk". Yes, there are places, where people are "shabe-yasui" (easy to talk to), Taito (in Tokyo) or Okinawa are such places where people genuinely just want to chat. But there is one stark difference... they (at least to me) never feel creepy. And they don't approach you if you're not welcoming to conversation. And they never ever want to give you something or take you places. NEVER.
      The rules we were taught as children apply to adults as well. NEVER TAKE CANDY FROM STANGERS. NEVER FOLLOW STRANGERS.

    • @lou00006
      @lou00006 Pƙed rokem +3

      I havent seen that vid, what happened over in Niigata?

    • @marihanderkhan5663
      @marihanderkhan5663 Pƙed rokem +10

      Straight out of Midsommar

    • @dark_knight109
      @dark_knight109 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@lou00006 Chris describes it in this video (it's the "biscuit lady").

    • @theRPGmaster
      @theRPGmaster Pƙed rokem +4

      @@marihanderkhan5663 Midsommar is actually always nice, sun, drinking, and strawberry cake. As a Swede I haven't experienced anything like in the movie.

  • @mikespike2099
    @mikespike2099 Pƙed rokem +10

    15:10 "whenever someone comes up to me in a very friendly and happy manner I assume it will be a scam" .... can definitely say that is the rule in Britain.... no one in their right mind would be happy walking on the street!!!

  • @nononono3421
    @nononono3421 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +4

    “I don’t drink.” problem solved?

  • @leafster1337
    @leafster1337 Pƙed rokem +87

    a youtuber called “dark side of japan yuki” intentionally went to one of these bars while secretly recording, so any claims were recorded. in the end he was threatened to be killed and he just said no im leaving. ended up at the police station with the guy asking for a tens of thousands of yen, but he had confirmed the prices on camera before drinking so they settled the bill correctly and they split ways. i think this worked since hes japanese, a foreigner might not be so lucky
    the video is called
    I battled Yakuza at a Yakuza rip-off bar in Shinjuku Tokyo Kabukicho

    • @sankujamatia525
      @sankujamatia525 Pƙed rokem +2

      Thats not Yakuza.
      Yakuza doesn't do small things like that.
      You have been fooled

    • @Veniks
      @Veniks Pƙed rokem +5

      Many of his videos are scripted/fake. But its indeed something that can happen in Japan.

    • @Sx-xy2zi
      @Sx-xy2zi Pƙed rokem

      @@Veniks wait proof for how it's fake?

    • @Sx-xy2zi
      @Sx-xy2zi Pƙed rokem

      @@sankujamatia525 who is it then?

    • @FroggerbobT
      @FroggerbobT Pƙed rokem +9

      @@sankujamatia525 You watch too much anime, guy. They're a gang, same as any other.

  • @AlejandroValenzuela
    @AlejandroValenzuela Pƙed rokem +305

    Me and my friends almost got into one of these scams when there was an overly friendly guy in Roppongi trying to lure us into a bar.. unfortunately for the guy I am Mexican and somewhat paranoid and told my friends that’s basically how one ends waking up without a kidney. 😅

    • @AlejandroValenzuela
      @AlejandroValenzuela Pƙed rokem +14

      I also remember chatting with someone in a hostel who had practically the same experience with forcibly joining a cult, but he seemed more amused by it than annoyed.

    • @quackinator1609
      @quackinator1609 Pƙed rokem +27

      I was in a bar in Roppongi when a random guy approached me. He was from Spain and was trying to make small-talk. Then out of nowhere he starts telling me that could hook me up with anything. You name it! Weed, cocaine, meth, etc. I acted like I had to go to the restroom and just booked it

    • @heyhorinshi
      @heyhorinshi Pƙed rokem +28

      When anxiety is your superpower lol

    • @TharzZzDunN
      @TharzZzDunN Pƙed rokem +7

      Sometimes I wonder if we're evolving anxiety to replace the missing common sense, too paranoid to get trapped if you never leave the house.

    • @uncletiggermclaren7592
      @uncletiggermclaren7592 Pƙed rokem +12

      It is not paranoia, because someone from Mexico has to be the MOST cautious or his kidneys are gunna be in different times zones.

  • @elsamoy
    @elsamoy Pƙed rokem

    interesting video and thank you for your valuable information

  • @rivox1009
    @rivox1009 Pƙed rokem +51

    By the way guys, disable the magnetic band payment on your debit cards. Only use the chip payment. With the chip payment they actually need a PIN code for payments and can't just steal your card

    • @therealjetlag
      @therealjetlag Pƙed rokem

      wouldn’t work in the UK either. Contactless payments are up to £100

    • @jessicalong1809
      @jessicalong1809 Pƙed rokem

      @@therealjetlagthat still only uses the chip, not the magnetic strip. You’re thinking of contactless payment which came in AFTER the chip and pin thing. The band is what they swipe and you have to physically sign for it, like my parents used to have to do whenever they used their debit or credit cards.

    • @WolfetoneRebel1916
      @WolfetoneRebel1916 Pƙed rokem

      Only use Apply/Google pay and turn off biometrics(face recognition or fingerprint) before going out!

    • @Darth001
      @Darth001 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@therealjetlag you can use your mobile banking app to turn it off in the uk and also set a limit on spend on tap and pay.
      Also you can holders aka sleeves that you put your card in that shield from people trying to scam your detail's. Same with mobile phones just turn off apple pay or on Android turn off nfc in settings

    • @therealjetlag
      @therealjetlag Pƙed rokem

      @@jessicalong1809 Read the OP again. He says that you need a pin for chip payments. In the UK, you do not, for payments up to ÂŁ100.

  • @nickhess1
    @nickhess1 Pƙed rokem +305

    Moved to Tokyo about a month ago and have already encountered the cults quite a bit. They have definitely evolved beyond just approaching you on the street, I met people via language exchange and dating apps as well that start off with totally normal encounters that end either with Japanese that has all of a sudden gotten very very fast and trying drag you off somewhere or "would you like to come pray with me?" and being handed registration sheets half filled in with the information they already know about you

    • @aokyoutsuki7744
      @aokyoutsuki7744 Pƙed rokem +27

      That's... Actually fuqqin spooky, i dunno if i have the gal to run or look for an opportunity to dash away

    • @bikkiikun
      @bikkiikun Pƙed rokem +19

      What we (westeners) understand as "regular" religion, is just every day life in Japan. People go to shrine or temple, throw in their 100 yen, toll the bell and clap and bow and buy an omamori... And they just don't talk about their "spiritual experience". People who do, are part of cult. People who talk religion, mean cults. And most of them are pyramid schemes. People who talk about religion in Japan are only after you money and that of your family and that of your friends... and lots of it.
      STAY AWAY from anyone who talks religion, who offers religion.
      Shrines and Temples that are wide open to the public are generally safe. Those that are in Office Buildings or closed to the public... don't enter.

    • @krisb-travel
      @krisb-travel Pƙed rokem

      you're living in tokyo as a foreigner or japanese? so many questions lol, what are you doing there any how much rent do you pay? Im so jelous lol we visit japan 1-2 times a year but would love to live.

    • @karu2460
      @karu2460 Pƙed rokem +3

      What? So that particular episode in Konosuba was true

    • @bikkiikun
      @bikkiikun Pƙed rokem

      @@krisb-travel : You can get a one room, 1DK or even 2DK apartment central Tokyo (and I mean central, as in inside Yamanote-sen) for under 10man (about 900USD)... though you need to be relatively fluent in Japanese language and culture / behaviour, because most of those aren't rented to foreigners.

  • @scottcopeland2585
    @scottcopeland2585 Pƙed rokem +504

    I have had these guys bother me in Shinjuku. One guy followed me to an ATM and stood behind me asking me if I was a “faggot” because I didn’t want to go to the girly bar he was trying to entice me too.
    What pissed me off the most, was that outside the 7-11 there was a police sign that said the police would arrest anyone bothering people. Unfortunately this is complete crap. They don’t do anything.

    • @NatzoXavier
      @NatzoXavier Pƙed rokem +10

      Shouldve asked the cops you are being harrased.

    • @scottcopeland2585
      @scottcopeland2585 Pƙed rokem +125

      @@NatzoXavier which cops? The ones that didn’t exist on the streets at all??

    • @obhwg
      @obhwg Pƙed rokem +10

      i feel like the fact that you're a foreigner is why

    • @NatzoXavier
      @NatzoXavier Pƙed rokem +5

      @@scottcopeland2585 U didnt mention they werent close by.

    • @strife2746
      @strife2746 Pƙed rokem +18

      They should be deported.

  • @PrettyJuls
    @PrettyJuls Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    Thank you for the information!!! 😼 I will be safe

  • @Guy_W
    @Guy_W Pƙed rokem +9

    I met a tout in Shinjuku, not far from the Robot Restaurant. In a matter of seconds they make themselves seem so friendly and welcoming and will shake your hand, ask about where you're from, and invite you to cheap drinks and accompaniment of young women (who were standing behind him closer to the door, wooing at me). I knew what was up, and when I went to release the handshake and he didn't, I calmly and sternly said, "Let go of my hand." He did, the girls pouted at me, and he seemed to know he wasn't going to get me so he didn't try to save it. The whole exchange was 10 seconds or less and I was on my way. All of my other experiences in Japan were awesome and I met a handful of genuinely kind and friendly people who I enjoyed conversation with. It's good to be aware of these scams, but don't let it scare you into doubting everyone!

  • @destituteanddecadent9106
    @destituteanddecadent9106 Pƙed rokem +305

    As someone who's spent the past 12 years in Japan, I really want to stress that like Chris said, it's more of a Tokyo/big city thing. (The incident in Niigata took me by surprise!) The pros and cons of big cities and small towns are mirrored; in the cities you get people who can speak English, tourist spots that are more foreign catered, etc. In rural areas, there's not much in the way of tourist support, but less tourists also means less tourist targeted scams.
    That said, as long as you stay away from anyone who's oddly persistent in taking you somewhere, Japan should be safe and a pleasant experience!

    • @LittleDream99
      @LittleDream99 Pƙed rokem +22

      I went to University in Niigata (a uni with a lot for foreign students), and we were warned against cults because members (usually middle-aged ladies) wait around the supermarkets we visit on weekends to try and pry foreign students into their cult.
      They stopped me once when I was alone, they wanted me to "have lunch with them" and they would "take me back to school in their car." (Im born and raised Latina, Im not stupid enough to get into any stranger's car).
      I escaped them by saying I was getting back together with my friends.

    • @celfhelp
      @celfhelp Pƙed rokem +7

      i feel like it's this way globally
      i've experienced all kinds of things in LA, Vegas, and NYC that would never happen in smaller towns across the US
      it really just boils down to a 'street smarts' thing, which only comes with lived experience. it is what it is

    • @peko7446
      @peko7446 Pƙed rokem +13

      From what I gathered, Japanese in general rarely invite people/friends into their homes, much less strangers. These women readily inviting you in for tea or whatever is already suspect.

    • @Jordan-inJapan
      @Jordan-inJapan Pƙed rokem +1

      My thoughts exactly. đŸ»

    • @kairon156
      @kairon156 Pƙed rokem

      @@peko7446 That would be a huge red flag for me but in the moment people might not think clearly.

  • @NEPAscallywag
    @NEPAscallywag Pƙed rokem +416

    When I was in the US Navy we were briefed about the bar scams specifically in Roppongi and "drink girls" in general, never heard about the cults though. We had a guy who broke the battle buddy rule, went off by himself and came back hours later talking about how he sang karaoke with these really cool tatted up japanese guys. Surprisingly he didn't get scammed lol.

    • @drxgncs90
      @drxgncs90 Pƙed rokem +125

      your guy sang karaoke with the Yakuza

    • @anderskronquist9750
      @anderskronquist9750 Pƙed rokem +55

      @@drxgncs90 Well, if there's one thing the Yakuza video games has taught me is that those guys can really bring down the house! ... whether while singing, or otherwise.

    • @tildessmoo
      @tildessmoo Pƙed rokem +72

      The irony is, from all the stories I've heard of westerners in Japan, it's dangerous to mess with people who work for the yakuza, but the yakuza themselves are a blast to hang out with, since they've got money to burn and think it's fun to show off to the tourists. I've heard of people being afraid of tatted-up Japanese guys, but never actually getting hurt or scammed by them, and lots of stories of neverending actual free drinks, crowds laughing at each other's bad karaoke, and comped hotel rooms and onsen visits.

    • @heyhorinshi
      @heyhorinshi Pƙed rokem +40

      @@tildessmoo the ones with large tats are higher up and don’t need to get their hands dirty the ones starting off are doing it all for them

    • @JohnNorton5280
      @JohnNorton5280 Pƙed rokem +68

      I was "kidnapped" by some young street gangster types in Kyoto. They took me bar hopping and clubbing, paid for everything, and I danced with their girls -- who I mostly hung out with because they spoke some English. The next morning, excruciatingly early, some of us went to see a TaiDo tournament, which was filled with yakuza making huge money bets out in the open. I went back to Korea thinking, "did that just happen?"

  • @user-pp5fn1pt6b
    @user-pp5fn1pt6b Pƙed rokem +119

    I don’t want you guys to hate Japan, but I hear the same kind of story from my japanese friends. Just don’t believe in every people in Japan. If you have any questions, ask them to some normal citizen who is around you (hoping one of them can speak English)
    As an English learner, I would love to communicate with foreign people. Hope you guys have a safe trip

    • @theglitchcounter264
      @theglitchcounter264 Pƙed rokem +1

      Did you do this translation yourself? if so it is really good. It is not perfect, but it is definitely passable.

    • @user-pp5fn1pt6b
      @user-pp5fn1pt6b Pƙed rokem +1

      @@theglitchcounter264 yes, I did. Thanks for a kind comment. I appreciate itâ˜ș

    • @theglitchcounter264
      @theglitchcounter264 Pƙed rokem

      @@user-pp5fn1pt6b no problem 👍

    • @soujemn5
      @soujemn5 Pƙed rokem +1

      i've been wondering about collapsible batons in Japan for a while. Is it legal to carry a collapsible baton for self defense reasons in Japan?

    • @user-pp5fn1pt6b
      @user-pp5fn1pt6b Pƙed rokem +5

      @@soujemn5 I'm not a professional in law, but I think it's illegal. If some police ask you to show your stuff and they find a collapsible baton with you, then they may tell you to follow them to a police station. Self-defense cannot be a sufficient reason to have a collapsible baton in japan.
      Japan is not dangerous to make you carry them though.

  • @Tigriss187
    @Tigriss187 Pƙed rokem +1

    Thanks for this video. I’m preparing for a trip to Japan alone. And now I know what to be aware off đŸ™ŒđŸ»

  • @noneofyourbusiness4616
    @noneofyourbusiness4616 Pƙed rokem +275

    The video game "Judgment" has a side quest set in the game's version of Kabukichƍ in which the lead character follows a tout into a bar and gets a hundred thousand yen bill and can't get out of it.

    • @dannad74
      @dannad74 Pƙed rokem +100

      Yakuza 0 also has a side quest where you save someone's daughter from one of those religious cults.

    • @AveragePunEnjoyer
      @AveragePunEnjoyer Pƙed rokem +23

      @@dannad74 Munancho!

    • @darkdude1996ify
      @darkdude1996ify Pƙed rokem +12

      One of the Monogatari characters has a parent who got caught up in a cult as well. The way it was portrayed was quite sinister

    • @robintitanstudios6455
      @robintitanstudios6455 Pƙed rokem +5

      I literally just started watching Bakemonogatari yesterday showing that mom getting into the cult and found it super coincidental right now that a video about cults was released by Chris. It's sad but coming from a crime ridden country it's really nothing new for me.

    • @tango976
      @tango976 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@robintitanstudios6455 *he knows*

  • @drumsR4girls
    @drumsR4girls Pƙed rokem +391

    I hope the pandemic shutting out tourists for years has majorly hurt these scammers financially.

    • @TharzZzDunN
      @TharzZzDunN Pƙed rokem

      Except they probably double down on the locals to keep profits up.

    • @drumsR4girls
      @drumsR4girls Pƙed rokem +13

      @@TharzZzDunN I imagine the locals are more aware/informed about the scam. At least I hope so.

    • @digwillhachi
      @digwillhachi Pƙed rokem +24

      when i was there last week there werent many around but i guess when Japan opens up again they will be back out in full force.

    • @kayzeaza
      @kayzeaza Pƙed rokem +5

      They know how to make money other ways. Thiefs are clever unfortunately

    • @burkles4456
      @burkles4456 Pƙed rokem

      ​@@drumsR4girls i could tell a bullshit artist in my own language/country. They probably prey on the elderly japanese.

  • @Bobrogers99
    @Bobrogers99 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +12

    A friend I have traveled with got a prepaid credit card with a $500 limit from his bank before taking the trip, and this was the only card he would have in his pocket when we went to questionable venues. He figured that even if his pocket was picked he'd only be out $500.

    • @decimusvitae
      @decimusvitae Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci +1

      I always do cash or I guess if in Japan, that prepaid Suica. When I bring cash, I portion it out, so I have to go back to my room if I need more money. No way I'm using anything with my bank info and transaction fees on top.

  • @Connief1990
    @Connief1990 Pƙed rokem

    I feel like I’ve liked every video I’ve ever seen on this channel. Always interesting. Always funny. A nice channel.

  • @Smashtacular01
    @Smashtacular01 Pƙed rokem +199

    When I researched Japan in 2017 to go, your videos came up a lot. I remember you mentioning somewhere that they are still very much a cash society. I left my card in my hotel room each time we went out at night and paid cash for 90% of everything on my trip. I went off to this bar where girls were overly friendly. Like, almost 'lap dance' friendly. I saw one girl pocket this dude's card and I immediately bailed. Had I not followed your advice, it could have happened to me as well. Thanks for that.

    • @bikkiikun
      @bikkiikun Pƙed rokem +25

      Except for a limited few cases, touching is an absolute NO-NO in Japan. Those exceptions are Hostess (or Host)-Bars / -Clubs, Snacks (similar, but smaller, with a "Mama") and Soap-Land (you go there to be touched).
      But any regular (non-sexual) establishment... NO TOUCHING. Even Maid Cafes and Girls-Bars are NOT for touching.

    • @Im-fq1mn
      @Im-fq1mn Pƙed rokem

      Touching women in maid cafés and girls' bars is prohibited.
      Racists will not understand this.

    • @ninawayyy
      @ninawayyy Pƙed rokem

      I just came back from a trip to Bangkok and had withdrawn all the cash i needed b4hand (before even getting into the country LOL at the airport). I took some of the cash everyday to spend. Nice solo trip in general.

  • @DANICHANDAYO
    @DANICHANDAYO Pƙed rokem +12

    me being japanese i’ve almost been scammed in takeshita street. there’s foreign men in the street who have this paper about their clothing store. they say just looking is okay but after u enter their store they kinda give u the vibe to buy something. i lied i’m busy, i have no money and i said i’ll come next time (which i didn’t lol) and let the store.
    it’s really common, lately there’s security guys in the street but that’s not stopping them from trying to lure people in their stores.
    moral of story, don’t follow people into stores or buildings, if someone wants you to do a survey, say no or ask them if you can do it on the spot, if not, chances are they’re gonna take you into their building and make you buy something, and you can’t leave if you dont

  • @bucksdiaryfan
    @bucksdiaryfan Pƙed rokem +27

    Theres probably a correlation between low reported crime rates and an indifferent police force

    • @V0YAG3R
      @V0YAG3R Pƙed rokem

      Yeah, there’s many things that don’t add up in relation to Japans’ “justice” system, or lack of rather, and policing. That until they decide you’re “guilty till proven otherwise”, locking you up indefinitely, till you confess something that you didn’t do. Lovely!

  • @veryfrosty
    @veryfrosty Pƙed rokem +189

    Good to see that Sharmeleon's partner started his own channel, wishing you the best!

    • @NZobservatory
      @NZobservatory Pƙed rokem +14

      But how will he get viewers if he's not a blonde chick in Japan?

    • @otakuu9609
      @otakuu9609 Pƙed rokem +28

      He has started a channel and that's fine but i feel like he should start a series where he cycles through the whole of Japan.

    • @WeIsDaTyrantz
      @WeIsDaTyrantz Pƙed rokem +8

      @@NZobservatory you mean a broad in japan?

    • @sleepyfork5250
      @sleepyfork5250 Pƙed rokem +5

      Who's Sharmeleon? Do you mean Bread Girl in Japan?

    • @NZobservatory
      @NZobservatory Pƙed rokem

      @@MrBejkovec But... But... But... She's blonde! In _Japan!_

  • @Sleeping_Insomiac
    @Sleeping_Insomiac Pƙed rokem +967

    "The police wasn't particularly interested in taking this up... "
    Probably the reason why Japan is so "safe".

    • @kathrynohalloran4072
      @kathrynohalloran4072 Pƙed rokem +286

      That is exactly why the crime rate in Japan is so low. I got robbed, went to the police to report it and after about 16 hours at the police station (no joke, I think they wanted free English lessons) they told me they wouldn't do anything. So no report, no crime on their stats. You have to wonder how often that happens, and how often people don't even bother reporting crimes in the first place.

    • @derekskelton4187
      @derekskelton4187 Pƙed rokem +56

      Tbf there is next to no violent crime, but yeah especially when it happens to foreigners nobody will do anything. But like compare it to any city in the US and it is incredibly safe. It's kinda silly to say it's not safe at all.

    • @Sleeping_Insomiac
      @Sleeping_Insomiac Pƙed rokem +159

      @@derekskelton4187
      Maybe, but literally drugging people to get at their money wouldn't be called a "scam" in my country, and police would actually do their job!
      So I can't help but wonder how bad crime really is in Japan...

    • @KlutzyNinjaKitty
      @KlutzyNinjaKitty Pƙed rokem +96

      I’m honestly dubious of any country/city that prides itself for being “safe.” Just because it looks nice and citizens can leave their doors unlocked DOES NOT mean a place is actually safe. Also, considering the significant stalking and harassment issues female citizens face on a daily basis, I doubt that Japan is as crime-free as people make it out to be.

    • @myself2noone
      @myself2noone Pƙed rokem +13

      Well I'd assume it has something to do with about half the population having one foot in the grave. Old people don't commit a lot of violent crime. One if the reasons the U.S has a bigger issue with violent crime is we're about a decade younger then most other developed nations.

  • @altruism9399
    @altruism9399 Pƙed rokem +15

    Same scam happened to me, my brother and a friend and in Thailand. We are form South Africa and also got pulled in at one of these places. Also experienced something like that in our drinks my brother got effected the most. Luckily i had "some" experience with being drugged and relisted what was going on, got us out of the place. We needed to carry my brother to the hotel and he is a big guy. We really struggled to find the hotel I left my friend and brother at some well lit area wile trying to stay awake. After about 2 hours of searching i got the place and some how managed to get them back to the hotel. we only lost about 4000 baht could have been much worse.

  • @dexterford8094
    @dexterford8094 Pƙed rokem +3

    As soon as you said Nigerian, I was like "Of course, who else". The upstairs bar scam is the same as the Patpong ones in Bangkok. Never follow a tout to an upstairs bar in Patpong.

  • @klidge
    @klidge Pƙed rokem +796

    Fun story: Back in 2019 my brother and I were in Shinjuku for a layover. We went to a yakiniku place near the red light district for dinner and when we were walking home we stumbled into an area with a lot of seedy looking bars. We got approached by one of the street greeters who was telling us they had cheap drinks and cute girls and we were both like “naw were good.” He wasn’t taking it and as we were walking away he grabbed my brother by the arm and was like “man I’m telling you you’re gonna love it in there.” My brother, a 6’4” dickhead grabs the dudes arm like how your grandpa would shake your hand and looks this dude dead in the eyes and says “We’re Mormons, and our 5 wives will kill us if they find out.” The dude gets stunned and lets go of my brother and we walk back to our Airbnb. Last thing I heard him say was “Did he say they have five wives?” Laughed my ass off all the way home.

    • @jaredf.6532
      @jaredf.6532 Pƙed rokem +61

      I'm gonna use the 3 weed smoking girlfriends as a get out jail card for this situation if I get into it

    • @heyhorinshi
      @heyhorinshi Pƙed rokem +8

      Gold

    • @McTaco
      @McTaco Pƙed rokem +4

      This comment is king.

    • @bradleyhowell4155
      @bradleyhowell4155 Pƙed rokem +40

      As a Mormon, this made me and my three wife’s laugh

    • @akiko7298
      @akiko7298 Pƙed rokem +7

      I love your brother's response!

  • @christopherbaldwin8146
    @christopherbaldwin8146 Pƙed rokem +161

    Unfortunately this exact scenario happened to me. Got drugged. Woke up with ÂŁ1700 charged to my card (more than I had on there to begin with). Police didn't care. Luckily my bank reimbursed me.

    • @qopiqq3629
      @qopiqq3629 Pƙed rokem +1

      How did you get in that situation?

    • @christopherbaldwin8146
      @christopherbaldwin8146 Pƙed rokem +35

      @@qopiqq3629 exactly how described in the video. I was walking through the golden gai district while on my way back to my hotel. Got approached by a Nigerian tout offering free drinks. Initially said no, but was very insistent. Went in, had one drink, don't remember anything else until I woke up the next day and realised what had happened. Felt very strange for 24-48 hours.

    • @qopiqq3629
      @qopiqq3629 Pƙed rokem +10

      @@christopherbaldwin8146 Not gonna lie i'd probably have fallen for it aswell. Good thing you got your money back

    • @christopherbaldwin8146
      @christopherbaldwin8146 Pƙed rokem +13

      @@qopiqq3629 Thank you, was a very surreal experience. The police were not helpful in the slightest, luckily my bank was very supportive.

    • @andyo1872
      @andyo1872 Pƙed rokem +9

      ​@@christopherbaldwin8146 That's real fortunate that your bank was able to reimburse you. Some bank would not reimburse for stolen or missing credit card happen in oversees. (Bastards..) Visiting nearby embassy may or may not be helpful... (I cant say so certain about this..)

  • @travellinman382
    @travellinman382 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

    Great video, thank you. Your “Blade Runner” decor in your studio is very cool. I’m hoping to visit Japan within the next 18 months or so.

  • @artur6912
    @artur6912 Pƙed rokem +9

    I think I must be very cynical because every time I'm somewhere abroad and the locals are suspiciously nice to me and interested in me and they tell me I should definitely visit XYZ place, my first thought is ALWAYS: They want to scam me.

  • @iphonepunker
    @iphonepunker Pƙed rokem +291

    Holy shit, this almost happened to me when I was in Tokyo in 2019, a Nigerian women with ok English latched onto my arm and kept directing myself and my mate to a nightclub we had no interest and she suddenly started asking “Do you want girls” and both of us said “no thanks just exploring and etc
” and then she goes “Oh I can get you boys instead “ I broke myself laughing and asked her just to go away at that point I am terrified to think what could have happened if we gave in and followed her.

    • @mats7492
      @mats7492 Pƙed rokem +19

      „Well, so you have unicorns? I’m only interested in uniforms. GOOD DAY, MAM!“

    • @LuiBei1994
      @LuiBei1994 Pƙed rokem +24

      "I want spiderman!"

    • @MaavBR
      @MaavBR Pƙed rokem +19

      Yeah, I've been to Shinjuku recently and I've had quite a few people come to me saying things like "are you looking for sex? massage and sex? fuck?". And every now and then there would be loudspeaker announcements in the entirety of kabuki-cho saying that you should avoid, by all means, going to places recommended by people who would proactively reach out to you in the street and/or paying with card on bars/clubs due to the risk of fraud.
      The problem being -- those announcements were just in Japanese, so 99.9% of the foreigners would stay in a vulnerable state regardless...

    • @valerauko6862
      @valerauko6862 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

      I once had a tout just straight up go "do you want pussy?" when I was on my way home from the gym. That was a surprise (I didn't)

  • @jakeconnelly2441
    @jakeconnelly2441 Pƙed rokem +35

    Pro-tip for traveling anywhere: If you use an android, turn on your google timeline. It will keep a record of where you go, and you can pull it up in the future to find the names of places you've been. In situations like the clip joint, it could have at least gotten them some more details about where they were.
    Also, I definitely had a similar cult experience last time I was in Tokyo (2019). Me and 3 friends were out in west Tokyo by Shimokita, and these 3 middle aged/older ladies made a B line for us, and kept insisting we come with them to church. Politely sidestepped it, and eventually just started to wander off to the side to break conversation.

  • @welcometohokkaidojapan
    @welcometohokkaidojapan Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci +1

    Im a guide in Tokyo and i always warn my guests, got few with the same problems as you did described, the funny thing is that you can see foreign security people walking around shinjuku warning people , and that is amazingly helpful

  • @denisea.9033
    @denisea.9033 Pƙed rokem +5

    When I first moved to Japan, we were visiting a tourist area and one lady from a small group in the area came up and was asking if she could pray with and for me and my children. She had pamphlets and kept wanting to hold our hands for prayer (I saw them do this with other foreigners there who prayed with them holding hands and with closed eyes). I'm super skeptical having grown up in a big city where scams happen all the time, so I said "no thank you" and she insisted and even my kids were saying, "come on mom she just wants to pray". I ended up walking away saying thank you and that she could pray for me from a distance if she wanted to but I did not want to stay there and hold a stranger's hand while she prayed God knows what in a foreign language. Scam or not, IDK for sure, but it felt very suspicious so I insistently declined. Thanks for this video!!

  • @jeffroberts2845
    @jeffroberts2845 Pƙed rokem +324

    I got targeted as soon as I walked out of Shinjuku Station after traveling from the Airport. "Come with us for a good time", "Come and party with me and my friends", and "Come and meet my friends" all by Japanese women whose grasp of English was probably limited to those phrases. Being 6' 2" didn't help. I was like a lighthouse in a storm attracting everyone and everything. By far the worst though was the Nigerians. They get right in your face and try to stop you from walking down the street. In the end, I reverted to a common English phrase "Get the f**k out of my way!!". Walking in Shinjuku at night, on my own, I was lucky to walk more than 50 meters without getting propositioned. The interesting thing was that during the day a loudspeaker system announces that what these touts are doing is illegal and to avoid them or report them to the Police. The mixed up world that is Japan

    • @almark6548
      @almark6548 Pƙed rokem +3

      Yeah, something tells me you're not actually 6'2.
      Especially so since you talk like 6'2 is tall. That's something a 5'4 dude would do.

    • @DamnAwesome
      @DamnAwesome Pƙed rokem +35

      @@almark6548 lol

    • @SomeOne-wr1wr
      @SomeOne-wr1wr Pƙed rokem +104

      @@almark6548 Why does that even bother you so much...? Do you like him or something wtf, you're caring about a strangers height. And yes, 6'2 would definitely be considered tall in Japan, have you been there?

    • @elieoni-6213
      @elieoni-6213 Pƙed rokem +38

      @@SomeOne-wr1wr 6'2 is tall everywhere ... 5.8 is an average height for men so being 4 inches above that is tall, totally agree with the rest of the comment.

    • @SomeOne-wr1wr
      @SomeOne-wr1wr Pƙed rokem +9

      @@elieoni-6213 Yea ik the average height for men is 5'8 but the delusional complex guy above doesn't think so...

  • @gutmicrobiomequeen
    @gutmicrobiomequeen Pƙed rokem +6

    👉 Here's the JAJ video with the biscuit lady (you know you were gonna look for this!) đŸ„° czcams.com/video/iaKcXpr0tUU/video.html

  • @timpe5393
    @timpe5393 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

    Thank you for the video 🙏was planning a night out on our trip in Shinjuku, you know dinner and a few brinks at different bars but its not worth it after seeing the comments . Especially when drinking makes you less aware of stuffing happening around you .

  • @jivepsilocybe993
    @jivepsilocybe993 Pƙed rokem

    Haven't seen a video from you in a minute loving the set! Missing ur apartment to tho.

  • @jackiechang1758
    @jackiechang1758 Pƙed rokem +139

    Can attest to the experience with scouts on the streets of Kabukicho trying to lure us to a club and being very persistent and following us down the street when we felt like making a quick exit to escape the conversation. After that encounter we learned to avoid that street and stick to the areas that were more lit and had more people and eateries. Other than that, our stay in Shinjuku just adjacent to Kabukicho was a fun time!

  • @OddHunter5504
    @OddHunter5504 Pƙed rokem +30

    “Two monkeys went on a rampage”
    Goddamnit Connor, Wacky weekend got really out of hand

  • @jrtorres0928
    @jrtorres0928 Pƙed rokem +2

    Was in Shinjuku a few years back and I was approach multiple times near several bars and your best bet is to just completely ignore them and keep walking. I saw a lot of people stopping to talk and it not worth the headache. Some even got a bit aggressive after refusing them for those that stopped to talk with them.

  • @CarVivLie
    @CarVivLie Pƙed rokem

    I'm grateful for these posts, from you and others, but I'm now starting to dread traveling to Japan alone this fall.

  • @CoalitionGear
    @CoalitionGear Pƙed rokem +91

    When visiting Japan several years ago, I stayed in Shinjuku one night with my gf. We were walking around and suddenly it seemed like the atmosphere on the street changed with many of these touts hanging out outside many of the establishments. It was so jarring that we left the area immediately and seeing this, I’m glad I did. I absolutely loved my time in Japan and this was the only time I felt uneasy.

    • @FiredAndIced
      @FiredAndIced Pƙed rokem +1

      Once I visited Shinjuku and some guy advertised to one of our guys in our group if we want free hookup. That was really weird, it's the usual darker melanin guy tryna pimp. In a Japanese city suburb.

    • @hukesama8389
      @hukesama8389 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@FiredAndIced I visited Kabukicho back in 2019. Same thing happened. The entire district was filled with street touts, most of them were black foreigners. They came asking if i'm looking for prostitutes. Took us by surprised really.

    • @dominoplay3712
      @dominoplay3712 Pƙed rokem

      Same happened to us (boyfriend and me) in Osaka. We just kindda rushed for our bikes and rode away

  • @zubdub2506
    @zubdub2506 Pƙed rokem +92

    Good lord, shame on their bank. A situation like that would absolutely be regarded as an unauthorized transaction by our bank and federal credit union alike.

    • @Casey-Jones
      @Casey-Jones Pƙed rokem

      shame on the Japanese police as well

    • @Mix_009
      @Mix_009 Pƙed rokem +12

      Yeah that seems off. All banks i know wont even argue against it,. Unless maybe somehow i spend 6000 dollars every other day (and even then that wlukd probably make me a Very important client and they would treat me with care)

    • @m-wan2547
      @m-wan2547 Pƙed rokem +2

      But I mean think about it...you went to a bar that you don't remember the location of and also doesn't show up in google, you definitely got drunk there, and not sure if you were drugged or just had too many drinks. You claim that they sneaked your money without consent which you also can't prove since you don't have a proper alibi and were drunk to begin with, also there is no footage evidence since you can't find the bar anymore. So now you roll up to police and say you were scammed kinda feels like your fault

    • @NeonSake13
      @NeonSake13 Pƙed rokem +7

      My bank would instantly block that amount of money and they always ask for the pin. The bank is at fault also. It can freeze the money. And I would have made a scandal at the police since drugging people isn't something they should shrug off

    • @BlackRain_
      @BlackRain_ Pƙed rokem +2

      ​@@NeonSake13 The cops get a kickback from the $6k.

  • @GeorgeMonet
    @GeorgeMonet Pƙed rokem +13

    This isn't a scam so much as outright theft and assault.
    So much for those lying low crime statistics.

    • @V0YAG3R
      @V0YAG3R Pƙed rokem

      Absolutely! When he mentioned scam and such euphemisms I thought he was gonna talk about tourist traps and such, mild stuff, but that roofie story is ghastly! Something you would expect in Haiti, South Africa, a cartel controlled area of MĂ©xico or the Middle East, not Japan! One can die of overdose alone, whether it’s a legal medication or not, whatever they’re using.
      This is blatant robbery and kidnapping, since they do not allow people to leave the place even to report them to police, outright kidnapping charges = life in prison AT THE VERY LEAST!
      This is one of the things that keeps me away from ever visiting Japan, their fifth world country, Iranian like “justice” or lack of rather, system. Beyond the pale and paradoxical given their advancement in other areas. And their infamous “innocent till proven otherwise”. “Funny” how they still allow these known criminal enterprises to operate like nothing and outright dismiss victims who report such, how convenient! So if something really bad happens to you while living in Japan you’re absolutely screwed, even with international backlash and noise, you’re left alone and no recourse, absolutely helpless!

  • @Maskedmous
    @Maskedmous Pƙed rokem +4

    My friends and I went to japan in 2019, we traveled around every few days staying at nine hours capsule hotels. But we haven't gotten into any scams whatsoever luckily.
    Never talk to random strangers on the streets is a rule we grew up with.
    When they tried to hand us pamphlets we just deny them and then look away. They usually backed off, we haven't had any persistent one.
    We also made sure we went in pairs and never alone. So even if we did our separate thing, one has to tag along.
    We did leave our baggage at nine hours (even if we were too early). They'd be just sitting there in the hall with others.
    Anyone random could potentially steal them. Pretending it was theirs, not that there was anything precious in there though.
    But the next time I travel, I do want to put in an Air Tag just in case.

  • @pauldavies8022
    @pauldavies8022 Pƙed rokem +109

    Hi Chris, My son has lived in Japan for around 20 years, and we used to visit every year and stay with him and his family, one time when he picked us up from the airport he stopped at an IKEA store near Tokyo, as I waited for my wife and son at the bottom of the escalator I was approached by a Caucasian women with a Japanese man pushing a trolley, she started asking various questions which ended with her giving me a pamphlet and when I looked, I had gone 6,000 miles only to be approached by a jehovah witness.đŸ˜€

    • @youraveragepasser-by7367
      @youraveragepasser-by7367 Pƙed rokem +6

      đŸ€ŁđŸ€Ł

    • @syedhashim9801
      @syedhashim9801 Pƙed rokem +1

      The word of god is every where :p

    • @missgolgistain5801
      @missgolgistain5801 Pƙed rokem +9

      There is no escape from them!

    • @porcorosso4330
      @porcorosso4330 Pƙed rokem +2

      They have headquarters in many major cities in the world really. If you check, you will find they own whole buildings outside of the US in many very expensive major cities.

    • @vinicastro9292
      @vinicastro9292 Pƙed rokem +6

      I thought jehovah witnesses only worked with doors

  • @DutchieAbroad
    @DutchieAbroad Pƙed rokem +546

    I'm glad this is finally addressed by someone! My partner got scammed in Shinjuku with his friend in 2016, where they followed a tout into a bar. They got drugged, separated and threatened until they made card payments, they lost about $3500 combined. They also tried to go to the police, who were listening at first, but when the police man spotted someone outside (who had clearly followed my partner and his friend) they became completely unhelpful. The next day the boys both felt terrible due to the drugs and basically just fled Tokyo as they still felt very unsafe. Hearing this story completely shook me as I had never heard of things like this happening in Japan!

    • @dannydaw59
      @dannydaw59 Pƙed rokem +65

      So the police were in cahoots with the guy outside the station.

    • @DutchieAbroad
      @DutchieAbroad Pƙed rokem +110

      @@dannydaw59 Yeah, definitely. My partner and his friend actually went to a different police station when they returned to Tokyo for their flight home and those officers were much more helpful. It even got escalated to a higher level when my partner mentioned the guy who ran the bar had a scar on his face (they clearly knew who this dude was and were keen to hear more).

    • @Ms666slayer
      @Ms666slayer Pƙed rokem

      @@DutchieAbroad Yeah Police in Kabukicho are mostly useless because a lot of them are paid off by those scam owners to don't do anything, i'm from Mexico and Kabukicho for me felt super safe compared to my city XD, also because of Mexico for me was super easy to tell scams apart, we meme in Latin America that we have this "Latin America instict" in which we can easily tell if someone wants to rob or scam us.

    • @CyrussNP
      @CyrussNP Pƙed rokem +41

      I’m surprised people still get taken by those touts. Even had I not known it was a thing I’d never follow a tout into a bar in any country.

    • @V0YAG3R
      @V0YAG3R Pƙed rokem +16

      You and this guy told stories about people being robbed, held hostage, kidnapped, one of the worst crimes in many if not most countries on Earth, at least in Western civilization, in sleazy bars after being roofied then going to the police and being told to get bent, to take it with their credit card company. Lovely police response and “justice” system! On par with the UAE, Qatar, Iran, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia where victims are totally helpless. Ghastly!

  • @davegriffin9083
    @davegriffin9083 Pƙed rokem

    Your videos are so good it makes me wonder if I'm about to get scammed!

  • @gayforbrae5693
    @gayforbrae5693 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    One of my Japanese friends was actually talking not too long ago about illegal maid cafes
    It’s kinda hard to understand her because of google translate being horrific
    It’s kinda nice to actually hear the illegal parts of that explained in actual proper English

  • @paradigmalter
    @paradigmalter Pƙed rokem +122

    People need to understand that no place in this world that is “completely” safe. Low crime rate does not mean “no crime”. Japan is in the safe side of the world but Japan has one of the most bizarre crimes. Low crime rate but bizarre. That’s usually the description I hear from people living in Japan.

    • @YeetTheMeat
      @YeetTheMeat Pƙed rokem +1

      Bizarre in what way?

    • @criticalthinker8374
      @criticalthinker8374 Pƙed rokem +19

      NO SANE ONE OF THEM, COMMITS CRIMES,. The ones that do commit crimes, are always crazy and also because Japanese are wound up so tightly, that when they spin out of control, it's lot of released energy.

    • @f.b.l.9813
      @f.b.l.9813 Pƙed rokem

      @@YeetTheMeat panty stealing, groping, peeping, hair sniffing, upskirt hidden cameras, that kind of bizarre crimes and the Police literally don't care.

    • @YeetTheMeat
      @YeetTheMeat Pƙed rokem +3

      @@f.b.l.9813 ah yea that sounds...odd to be fair. Panty stealing and hair sniffing have to be the weirdest ones.

    • @0x081
      @0x081 Pƙed rokem +1

      It is true that Japan was the country where the world's first poison gas attack targeting civilians took place, but there is a downward trend across minor and serious crimes and the murder rate is quite low.

  • @ryanawol77
    @ryanawol77 Pƙed rokem +108

    "There's no such thing as a free lunch."
    Everybody is looking for a deal or a steal. Often times you get something stolen from you in the process.
    Either pay for a tour group with an agency, or follow your own itinerary trip as closely as you can.
    If someone's "too friendly" with you in a foreign country, clearly something messed up is about to occur.

  • @manout-kidin8735
    @manout-kidin8735 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    It's a must to do some basic research of a country before going there .
    Watching bad sides first on CZcams like this then the good side is a must .

  • @Nagonaticz
    @Nagonaticz Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

    Thanks for the heads up :D im going to japan next year for 3 weeks on my own so thanks :D