Maid cafes

I mentioned about Maid cafes in my post about my Tokyo trip and finally
found time to write about it.
So what exactly is a Maid cafe ? Maid cafe is in its core essence a cafe
where you can have coffee, tea and etc beverages and snacks like a regular
cafe but ...wait for it......you get them served by pretty girls dressed
in French maid uniform and they refer you by “My master”.
Moreover paying them extra you can get your photograph with your favorite
maid or for the desperate people out there, paying them extra you can play
card games and have a conversation with your favorite maid.
That exactly is how one would describe a Maid cafe.



So when my teammate Ben, who has now being living in Japan since a year,
suggested we go out to check a Maid Cafe in Tokyo as a part of
our “cultural study”, I was intrigued .
So a bunch of us headed to “@home” a very well known Maid cafe.
Entry in the cafe is on basis of entry fee per person(around 700 yen,
that is about $7 or Rs 350) and a time limit of 1 hour. You get in ,
take a table and a maid will be assigned to serve your table for your
allocated one hour. The cafe we went into was almost tastefully decorated,
more like a cross between modern and Japanese traditional décor.
No photography allowed inside. There were quite a few female guests
too at the place, unlike what I had imagined. Our menu had a list of
beverages and snacks and choices like we would like to have a photograph
taken with our favorite maid, or play a game with one. or just chat with
them(all for extra cash of course).We ordered our tea and coffee and
our “maid” came with the tray, she made the traditional Japanese green
tea for my teammate Sean, mixed sugar into my Latte and stirred it well,
in short, the services of a maid. After making the beverages, now this is a standard gesture in all maid cafe, the maid made a heart shape sign with
both her hands and said something like “moi moi”,the meaning of which I still haven't quiet been able to get, since it doesn't have a direct English meaning,
but it's suppose to mean something like-“lots of love/passion/devotion to my master”.But in short thats what a maid says every time she serves you your drink.
We had a nice time drinking our beverages and checking out other maids,
each of them having their own unique style of dressing and styling.
We were of course keeping an eye on the time since its just limited to one hour
or we get to pay extra.

At the end of our one hour, each of us were given a card, which had
our name behind, and after a specific number of visits (in the range of hundreds)
we could get free drinks and snacks. As I was wondering who would actually
visit this place so many times, it was announced that a guy had just had his
200th visit in this maid cafe.Everyone chapped for him and all the maids in
the cafe posed for a photo with him. Wow.





I also eventually visited another maid cafe in Osaka, this one was more classy and themed like a wizard school, where all the maids were training in magic, on the lines of Harry Potter.

My take on maid cafes ? Well again I would say something like this can only
exist in Japan. When I first heard the description of a maid cafe before
visiting it...well...it sounded not very classy....more like a place for
guys to visit. But in Japan, where you have Karaoke and Cos-play as something
very common and normal,this too is one of the designed entertainment activity.
But to me personally, they were more of like a themed restaurant found in any
of the amusement parks, something I would probably visit once or twice just
to take in the entire experience. But as a substitution for say a regular
cafe place like Starbucks, maybe not, first ,since it turns out to be a bit expensive and secondly, regular visit to the place would not be able to
sustain the amusement factor or the charm for me.
But on the whole this is one unique experience everyone visiting Japan must go through once at least.
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