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  2. Maid café - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maid_café

    Maid café. Maid cafés ( Japanese: メイド喫茶 or メイドカフェ, Hepburn: meido kissa or meido kafe) are a subcategory of cosplay restaurants found predominantly in Japan and Taiwan. In these cafés, waitresses, dressed in maid costumes, act as servants, and treat customers as masters (and mistresses) as if they were in a private home ...

  3. Butler café - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butler_café

    A butler café ( Japanese: 執事喫茶, Hepburn: shitsuji kissa) is a subcategory of cosplay restaurant that originated in Japan. In these cafés, waiters dress as butlers and serve patrons in the manner of domestic servants attending to aristocracy. Butler cafés proliferated in reaction to the popularity of maid cafés and serve as an ...

  4. Nishiyama Onsen Keiunkan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nishiyama_Onsen_Keiunkan

    Nishiyama Onsen Keiunkan (Japanese: 西山温泉慶雲館, lit. 'Keiun-era Nishiyama Hot Spring') is an onsen in Yamanashi Prefecture.Founded in 705 by Fujiwara Mahito, it is a prime example of shinise ("long-established business") and perhaps the oldest independent company in operation following the acquisition of construction company Kongō Gumi in 2006.

  5. Host and hostess clubs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Host_and_hostess_clubs

    A host club (ホストクラブ, hosuto kurabu) has female customers pay for male company. Host clubs are typically found in more populated areas of Japan, and are numerous in Tokyo districts such as Kabukichō, and Osaka 's Umeda and Namba. Customers are typically wives of rich men, women working as hostesses in hostess clubs, or sex workers.

  6. No-pan kissa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No-pan_kissa

    No-pan kissa ( ノーパン喫茶, literally "no- panties cafés") are Japanese sex establishments offering food and drinks served by waitresses wearing short skirts with no underwear. The floors, or sections of the floor, were sometimes mirrored. [1] Shops generally operate under a "no-touch" policy. [2] The shops otherwise look like normal ...

  7. Hōshi Ryokan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hōshi_Ryokan

    Hōshi Ryokan. Hōshi (法師) is a ryokan (Japanese traditional inn) founded in 718 in Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan. It has been owned and managed by the Hoshi family for forty-six generations [ 1] and was thought to be the oldest operating hotel in the world until Nishiyama Onsen Keiunkan, founded in 705, claimed that title. [ 2] It is located ...

  8. Cosplay restaurant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosplay_restaurant

    Cosplay restaurant. Cosplay restaurants (コスプレ系飲食店, Kosupure-kei inshokuten) are theme restaurants and pubs that originated in Akihabara, Tokyo, Japan, around the late 1990s and early 2000s. [1] [2] [3] They include maid cafés (メイドカフェ, Meido kafe) and butler cafés (執事喫茶, shitsuji kissa), where the service ...

  9. Maidreamin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maidreamin

    Restaurant, music. Number of employees. 500 (2019) Parent. Neodelight International, Inc. Website. maidreamin .com. Maidreamin (stylized as maidreamin) is one of the largest maid café restaurant chains in Japan, owned by Neodelight International, Inc. [1] [2] The restaurant chain employs over 500 maids at 18 restaurants in Japan and Thailand.