Welcome, wild wanderers, to Things to Do in Tokyo! It’s Sunday, September 21, 2025—prime time to turn Tokyo’s electric streets into your personal adventure park. Picture this: it’s sweltering, with a toasty high of 34°C and a low of 27°C, so grab that ice-cold Pocari Sweat and a sun hat unless you’re hoping for a tan that’ll last till Christmas. Today’s Tokyo is buzzing, part tropical fever dream, part neon-lit metropolis, and overflowing with quirky energy you can practically taste in the humid air.
First, Tokyo’s calendar is stuffed fuller than a sumo wrestler at all-you-can-eat sushi. At Ariake Arena, MONSTA X is unleashing K-pop madness for fans at both 2PM and 7PM—two shows, twice the dance moves, double the crowd chants. If jazz tickles your soul (or you just want an excuse for fancy finger-snapping), Masayoshi Takanaka’s genre-mashing groove hits Kawasaki at 4PM. Chiba’s Makuhari Messe hosts TrySail at 4:30PM for those craving pop vocals, while SKRYU cranks up the J-hip hop energy at 5PM. If mixing music and culture is your thing, don’t miss the legendary Nezu Shrine Festival—processions, mikoshi parades, drumming, food stalls, and centuries-old vibes. This is the festival where locals strut around with portable shrines like it's an Olympic relay—except with ancient spirits and more snacks.
For families and anyone who loves “big cultural fun packed into small places,” the Nezu Shrine Festival is a goldmine. Preschoolers get face-paint memories, grandmas cheer the taiko drummers, everyone munches yakitori within shouting distance of the next parade. It’s been running since the Edo period, which means it’s older than most board games and twice as noisy. Whether you’re a history buff, festival newbie, or just need an excuse to eat three kinds of festival mochi in ten minutes, this is your Sunday spot.
On the business beat, Shibuya welcomes the “HerRise Workshop,” empowering female entrepreneurs to launch global ventures. Bonus points if you network your way into a collab over matcha latte. Over in Akihabara, check out the stage play “REAL AKIBA BOYZ~Over The Future~” at Kokumin Kyosai Coop Hall if you want some energetic dance crews, pop culture references, and wild stage energy—think Broadway, but with more glowsticks and maybe a Pikachu cameo.
Heads up, transit junkies: there’s extra shuttle service on the Ginza and Chiyoda lines because of festival crowds, so the train game should be smooth—just expect the occasional sardine moment. And if you’re hungry for novelty, word on the street is a new ramen bunker has opened near Sendagi Station, rumbling stomachs with truffle shoyu bowls and yuzu-infused gyoza. Tokyo’s restaurant scene never snoozes.
My must-do list for the day: sway at MONSTA X, then slurp ramen at Sendagi’s freshest noodle den, lose yourself among mikoshi parades at Nezu Shrine, and close out with some art spotting in Roppongi—the galleries curate late for the weekend crowd, and the Naked Men Art Festival is only slightly less wild than you’d think.
Local tip: Always carry cash for festivals—many stalls still run on yen bills and coins, not plastic. And if you need to find cool shade, duck into a neighborhood sentō bath house or basement arcade—nobody does refreshing escapism like Tokyo.
Coming up tomorrow: Perfume rocks the Tokyo Dome, more festival fireworks flicker, and new art pop-ups emerge. So tune in again for a fresh batch of discoveries and Tokyo’s latest epic adventures.
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