Krispy Kreme Japan’s sakura donuts are almost here!

Cherry blossom donuts scheduled to arrive well before the cherry blossoms themselves, but we’re not complaining.

Even though they only bloom for about two weeks, cherry blossoms captivate people’s minds for a much longer time. As we get closer to the start of cherry blossom season, anticipation builds and builds, to the point where you can almost taste sakura.

And that won’t just be metaphorically speaking soon, as Krispy Kreme Japan will be baking up batches of sakura donuts before the month is over. The chain has unveiled its new Happy Flowers donut line, consisting of two varieties, but the one that’s going to really be grabbing sweets fans’ attention is the Sakura Cream.

This pretty-in-appropriately-pink pastry has the look of a cherry blossom in full bloom, thanks to its ruby chocolate coating and five sakura petals drawn in white chocolate. An extra artistic touch comes from the shaved sakura chocolate that’s sprinkled across the top, bringing to mind the carpet of petals that appears in parks as the wind blows through the sakura trees’ boughs and their blossoms scatter to the ground. There’s more sakura flavor inside the donut too, thanks to a sakura cream filling, apparently so much that the donut can hardly contain it all, judging from the above preview photo.

Just like the real-life cherry blossoms tend to dominate people’s flower-related attention in spring, the Flower Custard donut will probably have a bit of a hard time stepping out from the Sakura Cream’s shadow. For those who do have the mental bandwidth/stomach capacity for a second donut, though, they’ll find an Original Glazed donut upgraded with a custard-flavor coating decorated with a chocolate flower with a matcha chocolate stem, which sounds like it should be a very pleasing combination.

The Sakura Cream is priced at 334 yen (US$2.15), and the Flower Custard at 313 yen. Both go on sale February 16 and are slated to be around until early April or until supplies run out, whichever is first, but since that’s likely to be the latter, you might want to get your sakura donut fix before the cherry blossoms themselves show up.

Source, images: PR Times
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Take a trip to Japan’s Dododo Land, the most irritating place on Earth

Have fun and feel annoyed at the same time!

It seems like these are especially stressful times, no matter where you are or what your background is. Whether it’s from unreasonable behavior, things not turning out as you expect, or being the victim of someone’s cruel actions, we all are inflicted with feelings ranging from mild irritation to raging anger every now and then.

And here to celebrate this part of the human experience is Dododo Land, a temporary exhibit at the Seibu department store in Tokyo’s Shibuya neighborhood. This interactive mini-museum is a tour of the many shades of annoyance, with the goal of turning anger into merriment.

Our Japanese-language writer Asami Oshima paid a visit recently to see firsthand what Dododo Land, wherein “dododo” is the kanji character for “anger” (怒) written three times in a row, was all about. There are different types of tickets, such as the Exhibition Ticket, which grants you basic access to the venue for 2,400 yen (US$15). It is also possible to add on Play Passes for an additional charge that will let you play the mini games inside.

▼ Guests are given wristbands with the exhibit’s mascots, Punda the angry panda and Ussa the angry rabbit.

After going through the main entrance, Asami was greeted by a narrow corridor with “Welcome to Dododo Land” printed in a The-Shining-esque repetition on the walls.

After that, she entered a room with a movie featuring a guy in a cat mask hurling insults like, “Do you really have this much time on your hands?” She’d be lying if she said it didn’t irk her a bit.

The venue is divided into a Punda section and an Ussa section, and Asami decided to go with the panda first.

Along the wall were plaques with “Minor Things I Cannot Forgive” written on them.

Top: “When uncooked rice is spilled all over the place.”
Bottom: “When an item I really love disappears from the convenience store.”

There’s also a Crappy Fortune board, where you can throw Velcro balls at two boards, one of which is about 97 percent “horrible luck” and the remaining sliver is “slightly good luck.” The other board has the four standard blood types. Although it’s not quite clear why you’d need to throw a ball to choose a blood type, it is indicative of a recurring blood-type theme in the exhibit.

There’s also a spot where you can vote on whether a certain transgression should be forgiven or whether a person should be arrested for committing it.

“People who don’t reply to your text, but you see them posting on social media.”

From there, she headed over to the Ussa section. First up was a display of Inexcusable Smartphones, featuring irritating behaviors that appear via texting.

Left
6:54 p.m. A: “I’m at the convenience store. Do you want anything?”
6:57 p.m. B: “Nope, not especially.”
6:58 p.m. A: “OK.”
7:23 p.m. B: “Sorry, you aren’t still there, are you?”

Center
8:14 a.m. A: “Are you awake?”
8:16 a.m. A: “The train leaves Shinagawa at 9:30, so let’s meet at the gate at 9:15!”
8:41 a.m. A: “Yoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!”
8:42 a.m. A: “You still asleep?”
8:45 a.m. A: Call Not Answered
8:58 a.m. A: Call Not Answered
9:10 a.m. A: Call Not Answered
9:13 a.m. B: “I’ll be at the gate soon.”

7:32 p.m. A: “So, where are we going to meet tomorrow?”
7:34 p.m. B: “Oh my god! I just saw YU-TA! [a famous idol]
7:37 p.m. C: “Wha? Where?!”
7:46 p.m. D: “That’s nuts!”

Next was an area where people with A-type blood were forbidden to enter. In Japan and some other Asian countries, there is a popular theory that blood types dictate a person’s character traits. While not quite as popular as it was 15 years ago, there are still a lot of people who subscribe to the theory.

According to it, people with A-type blood tend to be more on the fastidious side, and you might even say the “A” stands for “anal-retentive.”

▼ “Unforgivable to an A-type person: Using wired earphones without untangling the wire first.”

Asami was an O-type person, however, which is generally regarded as the most easy-going and adaptable of the blood type groups, so she didn’t really see what the big deal was with most of those things.

In fact, she was even among the people who piss A-types off. Her smartphone screen is a lush garden of unanswered red notification badges.

Beyond that section was the Merry-Go-Round of Filth. A cavalcade of images that will make germaphobes lose it.

“Wearing new clothes without washing them first.”

And from there, Asami entered the Zoo of Angry People. As you’ve probably surmised by this point, Dododo Land was more about looking at the lighter side of anger in everyday annoyances than more serious grievances in our society.

“Person whom everyone ignored during an online meeting when he asked, “Can you hear me?”

There were some live specimens as well, such as the “Adolescent child whose door was suddenly opened.”

Personally, Asami wasn’t especially bothered by many of the examples on display, but it just goes to show that we all have our own set of things that push our buttons. And for those who got particularly worked up from the previous exhibits, there were some mini games to help blow off some steam.

First, there was the FAFO Toss, where you chuck balls at various examples of annoying things written on paper targets.

Also, there was the Beat You Up, Bon Voyage! game, which is essentially the same thing, but instead the annoyances appear on a giant screen for you to defeat like the final boss in a video game, by throwing as many balls as you can at it.

Finally, there was the Flying Crappy Reply game, where you have to send the lamest and most inappropriate social media replies flying into their own graves with a slingshot.

Even though Asami tends to have a live-and-let-live attitude, there were some things showcased at Dododo Land that have been known to grind even her gears from time to time. First was the psychological screw-job of getting a task from work on the weekend. Even though it says it can wait until next week, the very notion of it had already polluted her otherwise carefree mind.

“Getting a message from work on your day off saying, ‘You can confirm this on Monday.’”

There was also the “Are you free?” trap, where someone confirms you don’t have plans before springing an unpleasant invitation, leaving you unable to easily come up with an excuse.

8:06 p.m. B: “Are you free tomorrow?”
8:23 p.m. A: “Totally! What’s up?”
8:27 p.m. B: “My company is having a party to celebrate our new office. Do you want to come?”
8:28 p.m. B: “It costs 3,500 yen, but there’s catering and it’s all-you-can-drink!”

Another one that wasn’t mentioned and really bugged Asami was when using a public restroom, the person who went before left the toilet paper all gnarled and hanging out, leaving only her overactive imagination to guess how it ended up like that.

Overall, she walked away from Dododo Land realizing the broad spectrum of things that bother all kinds of people. It’s probably impossible not to inadvertently upset someone as we go through life, but perhaps we can all do better to not let our own anger dictate how we live our lives. One way is to appreciate the absurdity of the situation and at least find the humor in it to begin to feel better and move on with our lives.

Event information
Dododo Land / 怒怒怒ランド
Venue: Seibu Shibuya Store 1F Basement Hall B
西武渋谷店B館地下1F
Address: Tokyo-to, Shibuya-ku, Udagawa-cho 21-1
東京都渋谷区宇田川町21-1
Runs 16 November, 2025 – 25 February, 2026
Open 10 a.m. – 9 p.m. (Doors close at 8 p.m.)
Website

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Family Mart releases huge range of cute sweets for Cat Day in Japan

Convenience store chain wants us to bite into paw pads and cat tails in this limited-edition 17-piece collection

In Japan, cats are held in such high regard that they even have their own day dedicated to them, with 22 February known as Cat Day, due to the way the numbers “ni ni ni” (“two, two, two”) sound like “nyan nyan nyan” (“meow meow meow”).

While it’s an ideal day to spoil your special fur babies, it’s also a day to treat yourself to the healing powers of cute cats, and convenience store chain Family Mart has some of the cutest products around, thanks to its annual “Family Nyart Daisakusen” (“Family Nyart Major Campaign”).

Now in its fourth year, the campaign is set to begin on 10 February, and this time there are 17 products to choose from. We were lucky enough to receive 13 of the products from the chain for a preview tasting, so join us as we dive into the sweets to find out if they look just as good on the inside as they do on the outside.

▼ Let’s start with one of the cutest of the bunch, the Strawberry Chocolate Tart (248 yen [US$1.58])

As is often the case with convenience store sweets, the English description on the packaging leaves a lot to be desired when compared to the Japanese description. The Japanese here reads “Nikkyu Tart“, or “Paw Pad Tart”, which is a lot cuter than “Strawberry Chocolate Tart”, and when you take it out of its packaging, the delightfully spongy paw pad is there to greet you in the form of strawberry mousse. When you eventually bring yourself to slice into it, you’ll find a smooth chocolate custard within, making for a treat that’s cute, delicious, and definitely worth trying.

Mofusand Wafframe (250 yen)

Like many of the products in the collection, this one features popular “Mofusand” cat characters created by illustrator Juno, who’s been contributing to the campaign every year. You’ll find one of 10 different designs in the white waffle “Wafframe” frame, which is delectably chewy and filled with custard-flavoured cream. With one of 12 original stickers also included in the pack, this a treat you’ll want to come back to, time and time again.

▼ Sweet Buns with Caramel Bean Paste (195 yen for the two)

The Japanese name for this sweet pair is “Futago no Neko Manju” (“Twin Cat Manju“), and it’s a very cute take on the traditional Japanese sweet, which can be steamed or baked and is known for its soft, cake-like texture and sweet bean paste filling. These manju, moulded in the shape of cat faces, contain a delicious caramel-flavoured filling.

Smooth Red Bean Paste Dorayaki (211 yen)

Dorayaki are traditional Japanese sweets with a sweet bean paste filling and a similar taste and texture to pancakes. This one gets the cat’s paw of approval, and with a chewy mochi hiding in the centre of the filling, it gets our approval too.

Sweet Potato (198 yen)

The Japanese name of this sweet is Paw Pad Sweet Potato, which is yet again far more intriguing than the chain’s English translation. Whatever you call it though, it’s a delicious paw filled with the comforting flavour of sweet potatoes, and a texture that’s on par with expensive Japanese sweets.

Caramel & Milk Cookie (145 yen)

If we’re to go by its Japanese name, “Nyanko no Cookie Cyanyamel Milk Aji“, this is not a caramel and milk cookie, it’s a cyanyamel milk cookie. With “aji” meaning flavour, “nyanko” being a cute name for “cat”, like “kitty”, and variations on “nya” referring to a cat’s meow, this is a cookie with a lot of taste, and a lot of cute imagery.

Shippo Mitai na Cyaramel Cream Sando (178 yen)

It’s interesting to note that some of the products don’t have English printed on them, which is a shame as we’d like to see this one with its literal translation of “Cyaramel Cream Sandwich that Looks like a Tail“. If you’ve ever wanted to bite into the tiger-striped tail of a tabby cat, this one will satisfy your cravings, with a wonderfully soft texture, a milky dough, and a sweet caramel paste centre.

Happy Nyan (186 yen)

A feline twist on Happy Turn, one of Japan’s most popular snacks, the Happy Meow comes in corn potage flavour., with four cute cat packages to choose from.

Ramuneko Hi-Chew (257 yen)

This catified Hi-Chew pack contains two flavours: “Ramuneko“, a play on Japan’s iconic ramune, a non-alcoholic lemonade-like soda, and “Muskyatto Soda”, which blends muscat grape with the “nya” sound of a cat’s meow.

Nyanja Meshi Hagane (183 yen)

This is another cat takeover of a famous Japanese product, in this case “Ninja Meshi Hagane” (“Ninja Steel Meal”), a line of ultra-hard gummies with an intensely chewy, long-lasting, steel-like texture. The ninja warrior character synonymous with this range is joined on the pack by “Nyanja” or “Kitty Ninjas” for a cute take on the sweet, with kitty motifs appearing on chewy, peach-flavoured gummies.

Gogo no Kocha Oishii Mutou Ice Tea (170 yen)

A Mofusand character brings kitty cuteness to Kirin’s Gogo no Kocha (“Afternoon Tea”), but this one is “Oishii Mutou” (“Delicious Unsweetened”), presumably because the cute cat provides all the sweetness you need.

Kuroneko Terrine Chocolat (248 yen)

Black cats are the inspiration for this rich, dark, chocolate terrine, which has the taste and texture of a ganache chocolate so good it’ll make you purr like a kitty.

Cookies & Cream Omelet (298 yen)

Known as Kuroneko no Omelet (“Kuroneko’s Omelet”) in Japanese, this is a dream collaboration with Yamato Transport, Japan’s leading door-to-door delivery service company. Known colloquially as “Kuroneko” (“Black Cat“) due to its black cat logo, Yamato Transport has thrown its support behind the Family Mart campaign by collaborating on this special creation, which consists of a fluffy cocoa omelette with a cocoa crunch cream, topped with the Yamato’s Kuroneko and Shironeko (“White Cat”) characters.

▼ There are also Mofusand ice creams in the lineup, priced at 960 yen each, and if you buy two of them you’ll receive one of these free acrylic charms.

The other items in the range are a whipped cream and bean paste sandwich (178 yen), and a sacoche and brownie set (2,220 yen) and tissue box (368 yen) adorned in cat designs by popular illustrator Coony. You’ll be able to find those in Family Mart stores around Japan when the collection kicks off on 10 February, and with a portion of sales from the campaign being donated to the Japan Animal Welfare Association, this is a very sweet way to show our love for the feline community on Cat Day.

Related: Family Mart
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Downloads of 39-year-old Guns N’ Roses song increase 12,166 percent thanks to Gundam

Gundam and Roses.

With Japanese animation having become a very big business, the promotional blitz for theatrical anime regularly includes hyping up the movie’s ending theme. It’ll play in the background of the trailer and TV commercials, and the recording artist will usually release a statement saying how excited they were to be approached for the project, and often wax poetic about how much they’ve been enjoying the franchise or reminisce on how important anime was to them growing up.

But in the case of Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway: The Sorcery of Nymph Circe, the producers didn’t say a peep about its ending theme prior to the movie’s release day on January 30. It was an unusual move, seeing as how it’s the newest big-budget release in Japan’s most prestigious mecha franchise, but it turned out that the producers had wanted to hide the surprise that the ending theme is…

…“Sweet Child o’ Mine,” the 1987 hit from American rock band Guns N’ Roses.

The selection of a nearly 40-year-old song as the ending theme for the newest of all Gundam anime might seem like an odd choice, but Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway, also known as Hathaway’s Flash, is adapted from a series of novels written by Mobile Suit Gundam creator Yoshiyuki Tomino that were published in 1989 and 1990, when “Sweet Child o’ Mine” was a more recent release. Hathaway’s Flash is also a follow-up to the 1988 anime movie Mobile Suit Gundam: Char’s Counterattack, in which the Hathaway character plays a major role and goes through experiences that shape him into the person he is in Hathaway’s Flash, so there’s a temporal connection or two to be made.

Thematically, “Sweet Child o’ Mine’s” bittersweet lyrics about the fragility of youthful innocence also fit with Hathaway’s character arc of going from the newborn baby of two other Gundam characters to heavy-hearted terrorist leader. Then there’s just the fact that “Sweet Child o’ Mine” has one of the most famous and catchy guitar intros in all of popular music, something that many people can recognize even if they don’t know the name of the song or the band who performed it.

Still, the song suddenly reappearing in a Gundam anime made it hit with a lot of impact, and interest in “Sweet Child o’ Mine” has massively spiked since The Sorcery of Nymph Circe’s release. On the week following the movie’s opening, downloads of “Sweet Child o’ Mine” rose by 12,166 percent on the iTunes Store, bringing it up to number 18 on the single-song chart. Sales of Appetite for Destruction, Guns N’ Roses’ debut album which includes the “Sweet Child o’ Mine,” also surged, pushing it up to 16th place in the album chart.

“Sweet Child o’ Mine” isn’t The Sorcery of Nymph Circe’s only collaboration with American musicians either, as the movie’s opening theme, which was revealed prior to its release, is SZA’s 2021 hit “Snooze.”

With one Hathaway’s Flash novel still left to adapt, there’s going to be at least one more anime movie to come, which means at least one more chance for the producers to get eclectic with the soundtrack.

Source: Rolling Stone Japan via Livedoor News via Hachima Kiko
Top image: YouTube/ガンダムチャンネル
Insert image: PR Times
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Japan’s first all-matcha ramen restaurant is now open in Kyoto【Photos】

Ramen Nishiki Sui has a very fitting name.

You could make an argument that ramen has passed up sushi as Japanese cuisine’s representative dish, and matcha green tea has long been the beverage with the most cultural significance in the country. So should you find yourself wanting to experience both of them at the same time, you’ll be happy to know that Japan’s first all-matcha ramen restaurant is now open.

Fittingly, this combination of two very Japanese elements that have become very popular overseas too is found in Kyoto, and specifically in its Gion geisha quarter. Ramen Nishiki Sui gets its name because it’s a new sister shop of the already established Ramen Nishiki, with the twist that every type of ramen on its menu has a matcha broth, and sui is a poetic way of saying “green” in Japanese.

Nishiki Sui, which first started serving customers late last fall, offers four kinds of ramen. Their flagship style, also called Sui (pictured above), has a creamy-textured broth made with matcha and tai (sea bream stock), for a rich flavor with a clean finish. The toppings are fancy too: a slice of teriyaki-grilled sea bream, strikingly color-contrasting bell pepper, and a fried enoki mushroom cluster dusted with parmesan cheese.

For extra complexity, there’s the Sho, made with sansho (a type of astringent Japanese pepper), bork belly, and edible flowers.

If you want a touch of stimulating tartness instead, there’s the Yuzu, with the flavor of the Japanese citrus fruit of the same name in the broth.

Finally, the Nishiki is a simple style reminiscent of the sea bream broth served at the main Nishiki ramen restaurant, but with the addition of matcha.

And while the portion size isn’t large enough to make a full meal out of, you can add a side order of Matcha Tsukimi Gohan, a green tea-enhanced reimagining of Japan’s tamagokakegohan, in which you crack a raw egg into a bowl of piping hot white rice so that the heat of the grains just barely cooks the egg.

▼ Extra portions of the pork and sea bream can also be ordered.

Nishiki Sui isn’t the first place in Japan to offer matcha ramen, it claims to be the first ramen restaurant in Japan to serve matcha broth exclusively, and between it’s unique concept, eye-catching visuals, and travel hot-spot location, it’s probably going to be a memorable experience for many visitors to Kyoto.

Restaurant information
Ramen Nishiki Sui / らーめん錦 翠
Address: Kyoto-fu, Kyoto-shi, Higashiyama-ku, Kiyomoto-cho 375-4, Sueyoshi-cho Ichibankoji
京都府京都市東山区清本町375−4 末吉町一番小路
Open 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m., 6 p.m.-9 p.m.
Closed Mondays
Instagram

Source, images: PR Times
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