New Year's Day Traditions in Japan

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  • Опубліковано 24 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3

  •  Рік тому +3

    Did the Japanese lady really say lmao? 😆

    • @tin_sensei
      @tin_sensei  Рік тому +4

      Haha, no. That was a bit of editorializing on my part. She was basically just explaining the rules of the game lol

  • @SuperFlashDriver
    @SuperFlashDriver 5 місяців тому +1

    As a person that's discovered the Japan country as well as the language all the way back in September 2005, and thanks to Gaijin Goomba for the introduction to its culture in the early 2010s, Japan is just one of those countries that has a huge history of fun things they have over there, that America is sorely lacking. America used to have a lot of fun things when my parents in the 1970s and my siblings from the 1990s and 2000s all grew up in. But by the time I got to high school, pretty much everything that used to be fun got thrown out the window in favor of smartphones and social media. I personally did too with my laptop, but that's because the people I used to talk to in high school, have simply graduated and haven't seen them again (and even my own class of 2015 have barely talked to me at all, and don't come to me to tell me what I'm doing wrong. So I have to tell people that you have to do it up in front of my face to do it. And no, I'm not going to get angry about it, but rather I wish I knew better of why I do this. Otherwise it'll get to the point where I'm lazy as heck, thus I'll never know until I either look it up or be told what I'm doing wrong....So it feels like as if I'm back in middle school/high school despite being a late young adult in my time).
    But with this video, man, didn't realize there was a competition to shove cards away from the user first before doing so. It's basically the Mario Party 3 mini-game Hands Down, or the actual game we used to play in the 2000s that was pretty much the same thing in America, but isn't played very often so there's that to consider.