Kotaku
Famous Anime Characters Will Now Tell You Where to Drive and What to WearEver since its first apperance on TV in 1995, Neon Genesis Evangelion has been a popular series for anime fans of many nationalities. In anticipation for the upcoming new movie, Evangelion 3.0: You Can (not) Redo, the official Evangelion Store has some new Eva< goods.

Evangelion Car Navigation
From the menu screen to the car navigation mound, this car navi is outfitted with Evangelion logos and designs.There are up to 6 different voices that change depending on the distance you travel, to guide you on the road. Aside from the menu screen, even the map itself is specialized with certain locations changed to fit the Evangelion world. You'll also have a tiny Eva on-screen as icons.


Eva Fashion
There is an exhibition called the Evangelion Store Tokyo-01 coming up this week, allowing you to take a glimpse of the collaboration between Evangelion and the fashion brand FUGAHAM. Ranging from T-shirts to wallets, each item is each unique.


For more photos on the Evangelion items, click the link below.
『エヴァ』のカーナビが登場
Famous Anime Characters Will Now Tell You Where to Drive and What to Wear Famous Anime Characters Will Now Tell You Where to Drive and What to Wear Famous Anime Characters Will Now Tell You Where to Drive and What to Wear Famous Anime Characters Will Now Tell You Where to Drive and What to Wear Famous Anime Characters Will Now Tell You Where to Drive and What to Wear


Kotaku

Sony Introduces New Hardware for the PS3 Digital Recording and StreamingSony's Japan-only digital recording system, Torne, is getting an upgrade. Say hello to Nasne.



Outfitted with a 500GB HDD, Nasne comes with an onboard digital and terrestrial tuner.


Using Torne's software, Nasne can record and stream to a variety of Sony devices—such as the PS3, the PS Vita, the Vaio, the Sony Tablet, and Experia smartphones.


Nasne is priced at ¥16,980 (US$210) and will be out this July in Japan. No word on a Western release.


ついにPS3でBS&CS放送が録画可能に! PS3、PS Vita、VAIOなどSONY機器と連動するTVレコーダー『nasne(ナスネ)™』 [Kotaku Japan]


(Top photo: 4Gamer)

Sony Introduces New Hardware for the PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for the PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for the PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for the PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for the PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for the PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for the PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming


Kotaku

Sony Introduces New Hardware for PS3 Digital Recording and StreamingSony's Japan-only digital recording system, Torne, is getting an upgrade. Say hello to Nasne.



Outfitted with a 500GB HDD, Nasne comes with an onboard digital and terrestrial tuner.


Using Torne's software, Nasne can record and stream to a variety of Sony devices—such as the PS3, the PS Vita, the Vaio, the Sony Tablet, and Experia smartphones.


Nasne is priced at ¥16,980 (US$210) and will be out this July in Japan. No word on a Western release.


ついにPS3でBS&CS放送が録画可能に! PS3、PS Vita、VAIOなどSONY機器と連動するTVレコーダー『nasne(ナスネ)™』 [Kotaku Japan]


(Top photo: 4Gamer)

Sony Introduces New Hardware for PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming Sony Introduces New Hardware for PS3 Digital Recording and Streaming


Kotaku

A Samurai's Guide to HarakiriSuicide is not to be taken lightly—especially in Japan, where it has a long (and bloody) tradition. In Japan, samurai committed seppuku (切腹 or "ritual suicide") if enemies captured them or if they defiled the samurai code.



The ritual suicide, also called "harakiri" (腹切り), was performed in front of an audience, and samurai sliced open their stomach—hence "hara" (stomach or 腹) "kiri" (cutting or 切り)—with a short blade called a tantou, moving the dagger from right to left. Their intestines would then spill out onto a small tray, and the samurai was then decapitated. In some instances, the samurai was not decapitated and died from blood loss or shock.


As this illustration points out, there were different styles of disembowelment: single-line disembowelment (ichimonji-bara), crosswise disembowelment (jumonji-bara), crosswise disembowelment in modified T-shape (henkei jumonji-bara), and vertical disembowelment (nambu-bara). The above Japanese illustration depicts these four types as well as pointing out how the blade should cut into the flesh.


A throwback to a very different time in Japan, seppuku was a gruesome and an agonizing ritual that many samurai willingly carried out in order to restore lost honor.


切腹 [Error888]


Kotaku
Girl's RPG: Cinderellife on the Nintendo 3DS purports to be—as the name suggests—an RPG for girls. But what exactly does that entail? Mostly running around a city, buying clothes, talking with men, and finding true love—all in a hostess club setting.


And while the setting is more than a little questionable, the game is presented as a modern-day fairy tale and actively tries to overload the player with girly cuteness. Check out the video above to see what it's like in action.


Kotaku

Grandpa Really Wanted To Hold This Statue with Ridiculous BreastsAt the age of 88, this grandfather got his hands on a Cattleya statue from Queen's Blade. But grandma wouldn't let grandpa see Cattleya topless—not at his age!



Figure collector HSkeleton had been gushing to her grandpa for months about this enormous Cattleya from Queen's Blade statue, and her grandfather was keen to check out the Japanese statue when it finally arrived in the mail.


Queen's Blade was originally a Lost Worlds style "combat picture book game". It's since been spun off into video games and anime.


"He said it was amazing, but I'm not sure if he was referring to Cattleya or the statue itself," HSkeleton wrote. "He kept asking to hold her but I just couldn't risk it." She noted that it was amazing the statue wasn't damaged in transit. Japan is a long ways away!


This Thursday, HSkeleton's grandfather turns 89. He's been through a war, a stroke, cancer, and open-heart surgery. Seeing open-minded seniors who don't judge their grandchildren's otaku (geek) hobbies is always a treat.


Kotaku wishes this grandfather a Happy Birthday, and hopefully, his granddaughter will let him pick up the statue at least once.


Picture #406531 [MyFigureCollection]


Grandpa Really Wanted To Hold This Statue with Ridiculous Breasts


Kotaku

What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit?Clive Lee is a Singapore-based game designer, a Flash programmer, and a cosplayer. He is also a hero.



Lee specializes in amazing Gundam cosplay, bring the huge mecha to life with huge costumes. His work is truly impressive. Just look at the detail and craftsmanship that goes into each of his outfits. Bravo.


In the above gallery, check out Lee's take on Gundam Unicorn, Strike Freedom Gundam, and 00 Raiser. Dazzling stuff. The picture of his disassembled costume is particularly fascinating.


~miragecld [DeviantArt via Gundam Guy via Japantor]


What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit? What Do You Say to a Man in a Gundam Mecha Suit?


Kotaku
The City Where Japanese Nerds and Japanese Temples MeetThe smoke from cooking fires mingles with potent incense and perfume, a heavy smell that hangs cloying in the air. This is Ōsu, an old "temple town (monzenmachi) spread between Ōsu Kannon and Banshōji in present-day Nagoya. While it might seem an unlikely pairing, the spiritual and the commercial have long been aligned in Japan, with stalls situated near temples to serve visitors multiplying during festivals. The mechanical dolls (karakuri ningyō) of Banshōji have historically been an especially big draw. Over the years, stage events, theaters and bookstores contributed to a cultured image, and long, covered pedestrian shopping streets added to the appeal.

The area also draws many an otaku. In general, Nagoya loves Mobile Suit Gundam (1979-1980) because the seminal TV anime was first aired on Nagoya TV. Indeed, the Joshin (a large department store for electronics) location in Ōsu is largely dedicated to Gundam plastic model kits. But it was later that Ōsu developed into an otaku town much like Akihabara. In the early 1980s, the Radio Center Ameyoko Building was erected in Ōsu, and stores dealing with mechanical parts, high-end audio and electronics began to gather. Local TV stations aired commercials about the Ōsu electric town, most especially the area around Akamon Street and Shintenchi Street. When GoodWill, a digital and entertainment mall, was established on Akamon Street in 1989, a shift began toward personal computers. Stores selling personal computers also sold computer games, adding colorful images of female characters to advertisements. GoodWill, in fact, opened a floor dedicated to bishōjo (beautiful girl) games and "adult" (i.e., pornographic) anime. The area was not just important to media and technology enthusiasts, but also young people who came for gaming arcades. Figurine stores, as opposed to the long-standing traditional toy stores in the area, were opening in Ōsu around the time of the national boom in figurines in the late 1990s. Luminaries include Spanky, dealing with classic American toys, and Stale, dealing with Japanese figurines. Both these leaders have expanded since appearing in 1997.


The building is conspicuously covered in images of anime girls, adding to the recognition of Ōsu as an otaku town.

Also in 1997, Volks opened a large store near Joshin, making otaku culture more visible. As more and more otaku-oriented stores appeared, M's Melody, a maid café, opened in the basement of GoodWill in 2002. Not only was it among the first maid cafes in all of Japan, but it is revered as the source of the traditional greeting ("Welcome home, master"), bells to ring for service, instant photos with the maids and "graduation ceremonies" for retiring maids. During the push to promote "Cool Japan" and the power of Japanese popular culture, Ōsu became the site of the World Cosplay Summit. The inaugural event was held at Ōsu Rose Court Hotel in 2003 and drew only five participants from abroad. By 2008, the event had become a media extravaganza, drawing some seventeen thousand people and including a cosplay parade through Ōsu.


The explosive growth of the otaku-oriented event mirrors that of the area itself. The otaku boom really took off in the second half of the 2000s. Mandarake was selling secondhand merchandise in the Sakae area of Nagoya for about ten years, but moved to Ōsu around 2007. Also located in Sakae was Gamers, which moved to Ōsu in 2003, then a new, highly visible location on Shintenchi Street in 2008. Nearby is K-Books, also here since 2008. Gee Store opened on Akamon Street in 2008, and in 2009 the illustration gallery Art Jueness moved to an enormous location at the intersection of Akamon Street and Shintenchi Street. The building is conspicuously covered in images of anime girls, adding to the recognition of Ōsu as an otaku town.


Even as Akamon and Shintenchi streets grow steadily more otaku, various people of all ages still comprise the vibrant shopping area near Ōsu Kannon. A diverse mix of people and interests, and the food and fashion stores, make for a unique experience.



Above are an excerpt and photos from Galbraith's new book Otaku Spaces from Chin Music Press. The book is available now via Amazon and the publisher's website.


OTAKU SPACES © 2012 by Patrick W. Galbraith and Androniki Christodoulou. Text and photographs reproduced by permission of the publisher, Chin Music Press.


(Top photo: Androniki Christodoulou)

The City Where Japanese Nerds and Japanese Temples Meet The City Where Japanese Nerds and Japanese Temples Meet The City Where Japanese Nerds and Japanese Temples Meet The City Where Japanese Nerds and Japanese Temples Meet The City Where Japanese Nerds and Japanese Temples Meet


Kotaku
Kotaku East Starts Right Now!Kotaku East runs from 4am to 8am Eastern. For more info about Kotaku East click here.
Kotaku

Iwata Asks...For Some Brilliant Sword & Sworcery WallpaperTo celebrate the PC release of iOS smash Sword & Sworcery, there's an "Iwata Asks" (oknotreally) about the game over on its official site. Once you're done reading that, you may well notice the astonishing new wallpaper featured on the site.


Above is a 1920x1080 version. If you want the 2048x1536 original, head to the link below!


Superbrothers [Superbrothers]


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