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Japan with Kids Who Love Anime & Manga: The Ultimate Guide

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Updated for 2026  ·  Tokyo · Osaka · Kyoto · Beyond

Japan with Kids Who Love Anime & Manga: The Ultimate Guide

Demon Slayer locations, One Piece museums, Akihabara in all its chaotic glory, Ghibli Park, and the real places that inspired the series your kids are watching right now.

All ages Anime · Manga · Webtoon Real filming locations 2026 updated

Japan didn’t just invent manga and anime. It built an entire culture around them — one that has spread to every corner of the planet and now defines how a whole generation of children sees the world. Families who visit Japan with kids who are deep in this world discover something remarkable: almost everything your child has been watching or reading has a real place behind it. The streets of Demon Slayer. The world of One Piece. The forests of Princess Mononoke. Japan is full of these locations, waiting to be found.

This guide is not just about theme parks and merchandise stores (though there’s plenty of that too). It’s about the full picture — from where to go and what to do, to understanding how manga and anime culture works on the ground, to knowing which digital platforms are shaping the next generation of this art form. Consider it a briefing before your children brief you on everything you’ve missed.


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First — Understanding the New Anime Landscape

Before we talk about where to go, a brief update for parents who might be slightly behind the curve on what their children are actually watching and reading in 2026. The landscape has shifted significantly since the era of Dragon Ball Z and Sailor Moon.

The platforms shaping anime & manga in 2026

Crunchyroll

The dominant anime streaming platform — Demon Slayer, My Hero Academia, Jujutsu Kaisen, One Piece. Think of it as Netflix for anime.

WEBTOON / Naver Webtoon

Korean-origin digital comics platform, now global. Vertical scroll format designed for phones. Many series are free. Enormous teen audience.

Shonen Jump+ / MangaPlus

Official Shueisha app — free access to many manga chapters. This is where One Piece, Demon Slayer, and Jujutsu Kaisen are published first.

Netflix Anime

Major original anime productions: Castlevania, Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, Blue Eye Samurai. Growing library of licensed anime too.

The biggest titles in 2026 — the ones children and teenagers are most likely to be obsessed with — include Demon Slayer (approaching its final film trilogy), Jujutsu Kaisen, My Hero Academia, One Piece, Chainsaw Man, and Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End. Webtoon titles like Lore Olympus, Tower of God, and True Beauty have also crossed into mainstream teenage culture. Knowing which series matters to your specific child before you go will help you prioritize the right experiences in Japan.

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Parent Tip — Do Your Homework Before You Land Ask your child to show you their three favourite series before the trip. Watch an episode or two. Read a chapter. You don’t need to become an expert — you just need enough to recognize the character on the merchandise, understand why a particular shrine matters, and share the excitement when you arrive somewhere that connects to their world. Japan rewards families who arrive prepared. The moments where your child realizes you actually know why this place is significant are the ones they talk about for years.

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Akihabara — Ground Zero for Manga & Anime Culture

Akihabara (“Electric Town”) is where the anime and manga world becomes physical. Multiple city blocks in central Tokyo lined floor-to-ceiling with manga volumes, anime merchandise, figurines, trading cards, video games, cosplay supplies, and themed cafés. For children deep in this world, arriving in Akihabara for the first time is genuinely overwhelming in the best possible way.

Akihabara — Key Buildings for Families

Chiyoda district, Tokyo — 5 minutes from Akihabara Station

Ages 8+ Updated 2026
Animate Akihabara — the flagship store of Japan’s largest anime merchandise chain. Eight floors of officially licensed manga, anime DVDs, character goods, and collectibles. Organized by series — find the floor for your child’s current obsession and budget accordingly.

Radio Kaikan — iconic building for garage kits, trading cards, and limited edition collectibles. More specialist than Animate; better for older teens who know exactly what they’re looking for.

GiGO (formerly SEGA buildings) — multiple floors of claw machines (UFO catchers), Gashapon capsule toy machines, and arcade games. Children find claw machines irresistible. Budget a specific amount, set the limit before you go in.

Suruga-ya — second-hand figurines and rare collectibles at significantly lower prices than new. For savvy shoppers and families on a budget.
Practical tip Some buildings in Akihabara have adult-only floors — these are clearly marked and require ID. Family-appropriate content is on lower floors. The neighborhood itself is safe for families during the day; it gets more adult-oriented in the evening. Plan your Akihabara visit for a weekday morning when it’s quieter.
Akihabara at night, when we first arrived in Japan with the kids. We’d been traveling for 20+ hours and everyone was exhausted. And then we turned a corner and the whole street was lit up — screens everywhere, characters everywhere, music from different stores overlapping — and all three children just stopped walking. Nobody said anything. Then the youngest grabbed my arm and said: “Mum. This place knows us.” That was it. Japan had them.

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Real Locations from Your Kids’ Favourite Anime

This is where Japan becomes genuinely extraordinary for anime fans — many of the settings in the most popular series are based on real places that you can actually visit. Standing in the location that inspired a scene your child has watched dozens of times creates a kind of recognition that is impossible to replicate anywhere else.

🔥 Demon Slayer

Asakusa (Nakamise Shopping Street appears in episodes 7–8) · Ashikaga Flower Park · Kyoto Railway Museum · Ashinomaki Onsen

⚓ One Piece

Huis Ten Bosch (Nagasaki) · Kumamoto Castle (Wano arc) · One Piece Tower Tokyo (Odaiba)

🌸 My Hero Academia

Musashi-Koganei area of Tokyo (UA High School inspiration) · Kiyomizu-dera, Kyoto (Stain fight arc)

⚔️ Jujutsu Kaisen

Harajuku / Meiji Shrine area (opening scenes) · Shibuya (major arc location) · Kyoto Detached Palace area

🌿 Princess Mononoke

Yakushima Island (ancient cedar forests that directly inspired the film) · Shirakami-Sanchi beech forests

🏯 Demon Slayer Mugen Train

Kyushu SL steam trains (inspired the Mugen Train) · Beppu area thermal springs

Asakusa — Demon Slayer’s Tokyo

Taito district, Tokyo — 20 minutes from Akihabara

All ages 2026
Asakusa’s Nakamise Shopping Street appears in Demon Slayer episodes 7 and 8 — a key turning point in the story, depicted in the Taisho era setting of the anime. The street runs 250 meters from the Kaminarimon Gate to the Hozomon Gate. The modern version differs from the anime (set in the 1910s–1920s) but the gate, the lanterns, and the atmosphere are immediately recognizable to fans. Demon Slayer-themed merchandise is readily available in the surrounding shops. Even families who don’t know the series find Asakusa one of the most atmospheric parts of Tokyo — but for Demon Slayer fans, it has a completely different layer of meaning.
Tip Go early morning (before 8am) for the best atmosphere and fewest crowds. The Kaminarimon Gate at dawn, with the giant lantern and the empty street beyond, is one of the most beautiful sights in Tokyo. Combine with Senso-ji Temple and a breakfast of fresh ningyo-yaki (character-shaped cakes) from the market stalls.

Huis Ten Bosch — One Piece’s Hidden Home

Nagasaki, Kyushu — 2 hours from Fukuoka by bus

Ages 6+ Worth the detour
A Dutch-themed resort town in Nagasaki that has become a major One Piece destination — with the One Piece Premier Show (a live theatrical performance unique to this location), One Piece-themed rides, and extensive character meet-and-greets. The resort itself is enormous and beautifully maintained. For families with dedicated One Piece fans, a detour to Kyushu for this is entirely justified. Kumamoto Castle, also on Kyushu, connects to the Wano arc of the manga.
Getting there Fly into Fukuoka from Tokyo (1.5 hours, ~$60–100) and take the highway bus to Huis Ten Bosch (2 hours). A full day at the park is recommended. Combine with Nagasaki city itself — one of the most historically significant and undervisited cities in Japan.
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Yakushima Island — The Real Forest of Princess Mononoke The ancient cedar forests of Yakushima island in southern Kyushu are one of the most extraordinary natural environments in Japan — and the direct visual inspiration for the forest in Princess Mononoke. Trees thousands of years old, mossy trails, rivers running through the forest floor. UNESCO World Heritage Site. If your family has watched Princess Mononoke, hiking through Yakushima is one of those experiences where the fictional and the real blur in a genuinely magical way. The island is 2 hours by hydrofoil from Kagoshima. Best for families with older children (10+) who can manage 4–6 hour forest hikes. Budget 2–3 days.

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Manga Museums & Galleries

Kyoto International Manga Museum

Nakagyo-ku, Kyoto — 10 minutes from Kyoto Station

Ages 6+ Updated 2026
A paradise for manga fans big and small — a comprehensive museum dedicated entirely to manga as an art form, housed in a beautifully converted elementary school in central Kyoto. The shelves contain over 300,000 manga volumes that visitors can take down and read freely. Exhibitions cover the history and artistic development of manga, including original artwork by famous creators. A children’s library and periodic kamishibai (traditional Japanese illustrated storytelling) performances make it genuinely engaging for younger visitors. One of the most underrated attractions in Kyoto for families with manga-obsessed children.
Practical tip Admission approximately ¥900 adults, ¥400 children (2026). Plan for at least 2 hours. The “Wall of Manga” — shelves of volumes from floor to ceiling lining the corridors — is immediately Instagrammable and genuinely impressive.

One Piece Mugiwara Store — Tokyo, Osaka & Beyond

Multiple locations nationwide

All ages 2026
Official One Piece merchandise stores operating in major cities including Tokyo (Shibuya and Odaiba), Osaka, and Nagoya. Each location carries exclusive items not available outside Japan. The Odaiba location is the largest and operates near the One Piece Tower pop-up experiences that periodically run in the area. For One Piece fans, this is non-negotiable.

Shibuya — Jujutsu Kaisen’s Home District

Shibuya, Tokyo

Ages 10+ Fan pilgrimage
The Shibuya Incident is one of the most significant arcs in Jujutsu Kaisen — set in the real Shibuya district of Tokyo, with several specific locations (Shibuya Station, the scramble crossing, surrounding streets) that are recognizable to fans of the series. For Jujutsu Kaisen fans, walking through Shibuya has an extra layer of meaning. The Shibuya Scramble crossing at night, with its hundreds of pedestrians and surrounding screens, is extraordinary regardless — but JJK fans will want to stand there specifically.

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Studio Ghibli — The Original & Still the Best

Studio Ghibli sits in a category of its own — not just anime, but a body of work that has shaped how an entire generation understands storytelling, nature, and what animation can be. Hayao Miyazaki’s films (My Neighbour Totoro, Spirited Away, Princess Mononoke, Howl’s Moving Castle, and more) are as relevant in 2026 as they were when they were made.

Ghibli Park — Nagakute, Aichi Prefecture

30 minutes from Nagoya by train and monorail

Ages 5+ Book months ahead Fully open 2026
Fully open since 2024, Ghibli Park is not a theme park with rides — it is an immersive walk-through world: life-size recreations of Ghibli film environments set within a forested park. Satsuki and Mei’s house from My Neighbour Totoro. Howl’s Moving Castle. The world of Spirited Away. The Grand Warehouse — the main indoor facility — contains exclusive short films, a vast Ghibli exhibition space, and a detailed children’s play area. Not suitable for families who want thrill rides; extraordinary for families who love the films. Tickets sell out months in advance.
Booking — critical Tickets go on sale approximately one month in advance and sell out within hours on release day. International tickets available via the official Ghibli Park overseas booking page (ghibli-park.jp). Also check Klook and GetYourGuide for availability when official tickets are sold out.

Ghibli Museum — Mitaka, Tokyo

25 minutes from Shinjuku

Ages 4+ Book in advance
A small, intimate museum in the forested Inokashira Park dedicated to Miyazaki’s world. A small cinema shows exclusive Ghibli short films not available anywhere else. The building itself is designed like a Ghibli film — winding staircases, hidden rooms, a rooftop with the Robot Soldier from Castle in the Sky. Rewards slow, curious exploration. Tickets must be purchased in advance through Lawson convenience stores.
Book Ghibli Park and Museum: Klook and GetYourGuide both have availability when official tickets are sold out — worth checking for both locations.
→ [הכנס כאן Klook affiliate link לגיבלי פארק ומוזיאון]

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Theme Parks for Anime Fans

Universal Studios Japan (USJ) — Osaka

Osaka — 15 minutes from Osaka Station by JR Yumesaki Line

Ages 5+ Book ahead 2026
USJ is in a different category from any Universal park elsewhere in the world — specifically because of its rotating Japanese IP collaborations. In 2026 the park features major areas themed around Nintendo (Super Nintendo World — genuinely the best themed land in any park we’ve visited), as well as seasonal Demon Slayer, Jujutsu Kaisen, and One Piece collaborations that change throughout the year. Super Nintendo World alone justifies the trip for many families — the interactive wristband system lets children collect coins and battle bosses throughout the area in real time. Check the USJ website before your trip for current collaboration lineup.
Booking tip 2026 Express passes for USJ are almost essential for families — without one, popular attractions like Super Nintendo World can involve 90-minute queues. Book them in advance through the official USJ website or Klook. The park is best on weekdays; school holiday periods are extremely crowded.

Toei Kyoto Studio Park

Uzumasa, Kyoto — 20 minutes from central Kyoto

Ages 6+ Updated 2026
A working film and animation studio open to the public — Toei Animation produced Dragon Ball Z, Sailor Moon, Digimon, One Piece, and many other classic series here. Visitors can walk through the studio’s period sets (used for both live-action samurai dramas and anime reference), watch live action shows including ninja performances, and visit the animation gallery. Less overwhelming than theme parks; more interesting for older children and teens who are serious about the history and production of anime.
Book USJ tickets and Express Passes: Available through Klook, Viator, and the official USJ website. Book at least 2 weeks ahead.
→ [הכנס כאן Klook affiliate link ל-USJ]

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Hands-On Experiences — Drawing, Cosplay & More

Beyond visiting — participating. Japan offers a remarkable range of hands-on manga and anime experiences that children who draw, create, or cosplay find genuinely transformative.

Manga Drawing Classes — Tokyo & Kyoto

Multiple operators, various locations

Ages 8+ Book ahead
Several studios in Tokyo (Harajuku, Akihabara area) and Kyoto offer 1–2 hour manga drawing workshops in English, where children learn basic manga character techniques — eyes, expressions, poses — from working illustrators. For children who draw already, these sessions are extraordinary. For children who don’t consider themselves artists, they often become the gateway to a new interest. The finished drawing goes home rolled in a tube. Search for “manga drawing class Tokyo English” on GetYourGuide or Viator.

Cosplay in Harajuku — Takeshita Street

Harajuku, Tokyo

All ages
Takeshita Street in Harajuku is the beating heart of Japan’s cosplay and street fashion culture. At weekends, the street fills with teenagers in elaborate cosplay — Demon Slayer characters, Jujutsu Kaisen, Original Harajuku fashion, and everything in between. The costume and wig shops along the street sell ready-made outfits at very reasonable prices. Children who want to participate can find costumes of their favourite characters and change into them in one of the shops’ changing rooms. Photographing and being photographed with cosplayers (always ask permission) is part of the culture.
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Gashapon — Japan’s Greatest Small Joy Gashapon machines (capsule toy vending machines) are everywhere in Japan — train stations, shopping malls, anime shops, department stores. For ¥300–700 per turn, a random capsule drops out containing a small figure, accessory, or collectible. They are officially licensed, consistently high-quality, and completely irresistible. Every major anime series has its own Gashapon line — Demon Slayer, One Piece, Jujutsu Kaisen, Ghibli characters. Setting a daily Gashapon budget before you go prevents the experiment from becoming ruinously expensive. The World Gashapon Station in Ikebukuro has thousands of machines in one place and is genuinely worth visiting as a destination in itself.

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A Sample Anime Day in Tokyo

If you have one day in Tokyo and an anime-obsessed child, here’s a sequence that works well:

Morning — 9am Asakusa at dawn. Walk the Nakamise Shopping Street, visit the temple, pick up character-shaped ningyo-yaki cakes, and for Demon Slayer fans — take a moment at the Kaminarimon Gate to let the location sink in. Then rickshaw or taxi to Akihabara (15 minutes).
Late Morning — 10:30am Akihabara. Animate first (licensed merchandise, organized by series), then GiGO for claw machines and Gashapon. Set a clear budget before entering. One hour is enough for a first visit — two if the children are serious collectors.
Lunch — 12:30pm One themed café — Pokémon, Kirby, or whichever matches your child’s world. Reservation essential (book 4 weeks ahead). This is one experience for the whole day, not three.
Afternoon — 2:30pm Harajuku — Takeshita Street for fashion, cosplay browsing, and street snacks. Then the quieter Omotesando for a calmer walk. For Jujutsu Kaisen fans: walk to Meiji Shrine, which appears in the series.
Late Afternoon — 5pm Shibuya Scramble crossing at dusk — for JJK fans, for the spectacle, for everyone. Then dinner in Shibuya or Harajuku. End the day at whatever point the children show signs of sensory overload — Japan’s anime culture can be a lot, and pacing matters.
Book themed café reservations, manga classes and USJ: GetYourGuide and Klook both have English-language bookings for most experiences in this guide.
→ [הכנס כאן GetYourGuide affiliate link לחוויות אנימה ביפן]

Planning Japan with anime-obsessed kids?

Questions about any of these experiences? Leave them in the comments below — we’re happy to help.

Book a consultation with me ↗

 

Cartoon-loving families will be in for the adventure of a lifetime in Japan. The land of Pokemon, Manga and Studio Ghibli, Japan is all about the anime, and there’s a cartoonish slant to everything from the food (pretty much everything, from cupcakes to dumplings, can be found fashioned into cartoon character form) and the style of dress – Japan is home to some of the craziest and most colorful street fashion in the world. And going comic book crazy is a genuine cultural pursuit in Japan – while there are two Disney theme parks and the odd nod to Minions and Marvel Superheroes, this is a nation with such a rich tradition of animation that it would be a shame (and indeed near-impossible) not to take the opportunity to admire the local version. With all manner of superhero shenanigans to be enjoyed in Japan, here’s our roundup of some of the best.

Theme Parks Galore

Japan takes its theme parks seriously, as befits a nation enamored with all things anime, many have a superhero or comic book theme. Top notch theme parks can be found the length and breadth of the country, with one of the best being Toei Studios in Kyoto. This working studio created classic cartoon series such as Dragon Ball Z and Sailor Moon, and visitors can visit an extensive cartoon gallery in between samurai shows and white-knuckle rides. Other top theme parks for superhero-loving visitors to Japan include two Disney parks in the capital Tokyo, and   Universal Studios Japan, which is located in the country’s ‘second city’, Osaka, and whose super hero-themed attractions and shows are themed around Western favorites such as SpiderMan, Minions and Superman – if the kids are getting tired of Manga and want to race around in superhero capes, you’ll be in for a whole load of kudos by taking them here. At the other end of the scale, Hello Kitty fans will in there element at Sanrio Puroland, around half an hour’s train ride from central Tokyo in the suburb of Tama. Probably best suited to younger children, the Hello Kitty-themed fun includes an opportunity to visit the famous feline’s house and enjoy some less-than-terrifying Hello Kitty rides.

Hello Kitty Hotel

Hello Kitty Fans can check into a ‘Princess Kitty’ or ‘Kitty Town’ room at Tokyo’s Keio Plaza Hotel, where everything from the wallpaper to the bedspreads and amenities are Kitty-themed. This super-kitsch decor comes at a price – expect to pay around 35,000 yen (roughly $340) for a family room, before taxes.

Tip: Sleeping at Manga Cafes/Kissas

Across Japan’s big cities, Manga tea houses, or Kissas, have evolved from a simple places to flip through Manga magazines and browse the internet, to become a budget-friendly alternative to hostels and hotels. Cafe users can rent private rooms whose large lounge chairs offer the possibility of getting some shut eye, and can be rented in six-hour stints or more. There’s not a lot of room, so this is more for single travelers than for families, but it’s a handy way to while away a wait for an early train, bus or plane.

Visit Kid-pleasing museums

If the word ‘museum’ has your older kids or teens rolling their eyes in anticipation of a tedious cultural pursuit, they’ve probably never been to a Japanese animation museum. Aside from the famous Ghibli Museum in Tokyo (more of which later), there are a whole host of other enticing options such as Kyoto’s International Manga Museum. Fans of the distinctive animation style will be in their element here, and kids can pick a Manga magazine (there are lots in English) and flick through it in the children’s reading room. For something more hands on, the Niigata Animation Museum, an easy trip from the capital, celebrates the surprisingly high number of anime artists to have emerged from the city (notable names include Ghibli animator Yoshifumi Kond; and Takeshi Obata,  creator of Death Note and Bakuman.

Tip: Niigata Animation Museum is a good bet for families with kids that like to get hands on. There are kid-pleasing games involving various manga characters, such as an opportunity to take a run with Lum, hero of the the legendary 1970s comic Urusei Yatsura.  

Tokyo

Japan’s modern capital is packed with an incredible number of attractions to keep those superhero-loving kids happy. Leaving aside the ubiquitous Manga Cafés (some of which double as cheap places to sleep for travelers on super tight budgets) there are museums, galleries and theme parks galore.

The Japanese Capital is home to two big ticket Dey attractions: Tokyo Disney (the first Disney theme park outside the United States, fact fans…) and DisneySea, which has a fun ToyStory ride that’s likely to thrill fans of the films about Woody and hls pals.

Tip: Fans of Studio Ghibli (creators of dreamy works such as Howl’s Moving Castle and Spirited Away) shouldn’t miss the chance to visit the superb Ghibli Museum in Tokyo, don’t expect to just rock up with the family – tickets must be bought in advance and are only made available at certain days in the month, and with specific ticket agencies. Full information can be found here.

Eat at Anime Cafes

Tokyo is chockablock with cute anime-themed cafes that are sure to be a big hit with the kids. At the Pokemon Cafe in Chuo, kids and grownups can chow down on Pikachu-shaped donuts and dumplings; fans of masked superheroes the Kamen Riders can check out a whole load of memorabilia and Rider-themed food at Kamen Rider the Diner in Toshima, while Gundam Cafe attracts as many grown up comic fans as kids, with its statues, decor and food themed around robots, known as Gundam – arguably Japan’s most enduringly popular anime series.  It’s located in Akihabara, famously a Mecca for anime fans with its many comic book stores and manga cafes.  There’s even affordable Anime accommodation at Anime Station Hostel, which has private rooms, games consoles, and a whole lot of Manga magazines to flick through, with rooms starting at around US$50 (5,400 yen)

 

 

 

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