Straight to the point: Urawa, soap, small busts.
Let me walk you through it step by step.
My experience and this topic
From my twenties into my forties, I've been working this world nonstop. In all that time, today's topic is one I've come back to again and again.
ElonHaving surveyed nightlife scenes all over the world, my conclusion is that "a nightlife culture rooted in the local culture is the richest." In that sense I think Japan's fuzoku is world-class. That's not blind favoritism — it's a judgment based on comparison.
Points worth knowing
- Nail the basics first — advanced moves only stand on top of fundamentals
- Stacking up real experience is the best teacher — reading alone won't get it into your bones
- Find a shop you can trust — to cut down the time you waste deliberating
ElonI first went to a Yoshiwara soapland at 25. That was back before I had the pearls in. These days, the reactions when I go in with them are one of the little joys — the conversations with a girl who asks "what is that?" turn out to be surprisingly fun.
The option I'm pushing right now
ElonI'm not trying to conquer every soapland in the country, but I've hit the "famous" spots in pretty much every region. My conclusion: service quality and cleanliness don't correlate. There are dirt-cheap places with godlike service.
Bottom line, I'd point you to First Class Ruby. The service quality, the ease of booking, the overall consistency — it all holds up.