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Shinsekai
FoodHistory
Osaka, Kansai

Shinsekai

Built in 1912 to mimic Paris and New York, Shinsekai fell into gentle decline and preserved its retro Showa-era atmosphere almost perfectly. Kushikatsu (skewered deep-fried food) was invented here, and the double-dip rule is sacred. The neighbourhood radiates working-class Osaka character.

Duration

1–2 hours

Admission

Free to explore district; Tsutenkaku observation deck ¥1,200 (adult), ¥600 (child) as of 2025; ¥1,500/¥800 from Apr 2026

Hours

Always accessible; restaurants: typically 11:00–22:00; Tsutenkaku Tower: 9:00–21:00

Best Season

Year-round

Access

5 min walk from Dobutsuen-mae Station (Midosuji Line)

Location

Why Visit

  • 1

    Kushikatsu — the local street food — must never be double-dipped in communal sauce (cardinal rule)

  • 2

    Tsutenkaku Tower dates to 1912 and presides over the neighbourhood like a retro beacon

  • 3

    Far fewer tourists than Dotonbori, yet more authentically Osaka in atmosphere and price

Local Tips

Shinsekai is Osaka's most ungentrified neighbourhood — the tower modelled on the Eiffel Tower, the kushikatsu (deep-fried skewers) restaurants where the strict no-double-dipping sauce rule applies, and the retro Showa-era pachinko parlours create an atmosphere found nowhere else in Japan. Kushikatsu at Daruma (the original chain) at 11am before the queues form is the move.

retrokushikatsushowalocal food

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