Tokyo News and Information

Tokyo's Autumn Wonderland: Festival Feasts, Art Stunners, and Sumo Showdowns


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Welcome, listeners, to Things To Do in Tokyo! It’s Thursday, September 25, 2025, and you've joined Oly Bennet—your globe-trotting, sports-obsessed adventurer diving into the city’s quirkiest corners. Grab your umbrellas and hop on—we’ve got a chilly breeze, a dash of clouds, and the city bustling after yesterday’s light rain. The air feels fresh, and Tokyo’s infectious autumn energy is putting a spring in everyone’s step.

Let’s set your day with a pro snapshot of Tokyo’s vibe: this week is peak “Art and Appetite Autumn”—that magical time when every block is a festival, a feast, or just plain fantastic. Expect the energy in Shibuya to be extra high as locals prep for weekend street parades, while Ueno Park glows with golden ginkgo leaves. The Sumo Grand Tournament is in full swing at Ryogoku’s legendary Kokugikan, so if you hear earth-shaking stomps, it’s not a Godzilla rerun—it’s actual giant wrestlers in action, and tickets are still available if you fancy seeing Japan’s national sport up close, according to Truly Tokyo.

Culture buffs, today’s the day for creative wanderings—the acclaimed architect Sou Fujimoto has his much-anticipated retrospective at the Mori Art Museum in Roppongi Hills, showcasing wild, gravity-defying design. Foodies, it’s your season: autumn matsuri means street stalls with literal mountains of fried chicken, grilled sweet potatoes, and festival treats, especially in neighbourhoods like Asakusa.

If you’re hoping for a family fix, Tokyo Cheapo reports that playgrounds and parks along Sumida River are packed with kite fliers, and there are pop-up kids’ workshops in Hibiya Park, everything from origami to mini-robot sumo battles. Speaking of sumo, check out an Authentic Sumo Experience tour, where you can step in the ring and test your might against professional rikishi—kids versus sumo is basically what Saturday cartoons aspire to be, as described by Magical Trip. Music lovers, by dusk, you’ll find indie concerts popping up around Shimokitazawa—think neon, jazz, and just enough weirdness to keep your Instagram spicy.

On the local updates front, Asahi Shimbun announces a new vegan ramen spot, Tanpopo, just opened in Ginza, attracting noodles lovers of all diets. The city’s rolling out extra late-night trains on the Yamanote Line this weekend for festival crowds, so you can party late and still get home—a Tokyo autumn miracle if ever there was one. If you’re wandering today, hit Asakusa for the last days of the Shiba Daijingu Dara-dara Festival—ginger good luck charms, lion dances, and endless snack stalls. For a quieter scene, teamLab Borderless has reopened at Azabudai Hills, plunging you into a digital dream world with interactive light installations—mind-blowing and a solid rain-backup plan.

Personal Oly tip: When you buy a festival snack, shout “Omakase de!” at the counter—it means, “I’ll leave it to you!” and locals love it. You’ll probably get the best, wildest mystery skewer on the rack, plus a big Tokyo smile.

And don’t dash off—with tomorrow bringing the first parade of the Fukuro Festival in Ikebukuro (expect drummers, wild dancing, and about a zillion “mikoshi” shrines), plus secret jazz jams in Ebisu and a “night zoo” opening at Ueno Zoo for evening animal adventures, you’ll want to tune in again for more Oly Bennet discoveries.

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Tokyo News and InformationBy Inception Point Ai