Recommended spots for solo travelers⁉

After the coronavirus pandemic, solo activities such as solo camping have been attracting a lot of attention. Many people have experienced dining, shopping, and other solo activities, but this time I would like to focus on solo travel among such solo activities. Of course, you can enjoy going out with family or friends, but going out alone has the potential to be even more enjoyable.
You can go out at your own timing, you can act freely, you can do whatever you want, you can use weekdays to avoid crowds, etc. There are many ways to enjoy yourself only when you are alone.

The Kitaro Youkai Warehouse The 3rd Story is one of the 100 stores selected by Nogizaka46 for the “Ohitorisama (Single Person) Tengoku (Pradise)” campaign, the group’s 33rd single, to be officially recognized as one of the “Ohitorisama Tengoku” authorized stores. It is a so-called “haunted house” with a different story depending on the path you choose to take. There are back roads, loopholes, and tricks, so you can freely enjoy the world of yokai.

Kiki’s Museum of Literature is a children’s literature museum that aims to make Eiko Kadono’s works and achievements known to as many people as possible, and to provide a place where children, the bearers of the future, can become familiar with children’s literature and develop their rich imagination. Children can freely choose books and read their favorite books at their favorite places.

Shunkaen BONSAI Museum is a museum about bonsai located in Edogawa-ku, Tokyo. Opened in 2002 by world-renowned bonsai artist Kunio Kobayashi, the museum displays over 1,000 bonsai pots. Check out the museum’s hands-on activities such as tea ceremony, kimono dressing, and bonsai experience courses.

The Kadokawa Musashino Museum in Tokorozawa City, Saitama Prefecture, houses almost all light novels from the KADOKAWA Group, making it the best library in Japan for enjoying light novels. The museum also serves as a base for disseminating the appeal of manga, and has a collection of about 37,000 books.

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Located in Roppongi, Minato-ku, Tokyo, Bunkitsu is about a one-minute walk from Roppongi Station, along the busy Roppongi street. In a word, Bunkitsu is a bookstore with an admission fee. However, the books on display are carefully selected by professionals in the field for each genre, so there are not always new books on display as in a bookstore.
You can also bring your own books to the coffee shop in the paid area and spend time at a table or on a sofa while enjoying a cup of coffee… There are also sofa seats where you can stretch out your legs, so you can relax and enjoy your reading time as if you were at home.

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  5. Yomiuri Land (Inagi, Tokyo)

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