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Namco Namja Town: a theme park for cats, gyoza and ice-cream

Namco Namja Town is one of two indoor theme parks run by Namco in Ikebukuro’s Sunshine City mall. We visited Namja Town where we ate at the Gyoza Stadium, sampled a few unusual ice-cream flavours (from a selection of 50!) and wandered through a haunted house. 

Namco Namja Town

If you’re anything like me, when you think of Namco, chances are the first thing that comes to mind will be video games, or maybe anime. After all, Namco’s other indoor theme park – also located in the Sunshine City shopping centre – is J-World Tokyo, which is their anime theme park. Unlike J-World, Namja Town doesn’t have a specific theme, but I would certainly classify it as one of the stranger amusement parks that I’ve visited in Japan (and I’ve been to a few!).

Namco Namja Town

Namja Town is probably most famous for its ‘Gyoza Stadium’, a whole lot of dessert shops including an ice-cream place boasting 50 different flavours of ice-cream (including some fairly unusual flavours), carnival-style games, and a haunted house. There are several Namja Town mascots, the main one being a cat named Najavu.

Namco Namja Town

Above: That’s Najavu on the entry ticket.

Namco Namja Town

Above: You might also find limited edition goodies such as the above Sailor Moon ‘Sweet Moon’ macarons and candies.

Gyoza Stadium

Namco Namja Town

Namja Town’s Gyoza Stadium is probably one of the two main reasons that people visit this amusement park.

Namco Namja Town Gyoza Stadium

Like Yokohama’s Ramen Museum and Odaiba’s Takoyaki Museum, the Gyoza Stadium is really just a food court that specialises in one type of food – in this case, it’s dumplings.

Namco Namja Town

Above: Ikebukuro seems to be a good place to spot cosplayers. It’s not every day that you see a pirate ordering gyoza.

Namco Namja Town Gyoza

The Gyoza Stadium has eight small gyoza shops.

Namco Namja Town

Almost all of the dumplings have pork in them, so this may prove a challenge to some. For my partner, this was no problem, but as I don’t eat a lot of types of meat, I struggled to find lunch there.

Namco Namja Town

From memory, none of the places had vegetarian gyoza, and when I finally did find a place that seemed to have something I could eat, it also seemed to have mystery meat in it…

Namco Namja Town

We (read: more my partner than me, since I had trouble finding dumplings that I would eat) didn’t feel that the dumplings at the Gyoza Stadium were anything special, but the dessert options at Namja Town are well worth checking out.


Fukubukuro Dessert Yokocho (aka Dessert Alley)

Namco Namja Town

Dessert Alley is designed to look like a street with cute little shop fronts. Kind of.

Namco Namja Town

Namco Namja Town Kawaii Food

Above: Patisserie Cute sells some really cute pastries. How cute are the ones in the top right corner with the Namja Town mascot on them?!

Namco Namja Town

Above: Your Local Ice Parlor – this ice-cream parlour was once known as Ice Cream City, and was famous for having many freezers full of crazy ice-cream flavours that you could buy and take home.

Namco Namja Town Ice Cream Museum

Ice Cream City has been replaced with a regular food court styled take-out ice-cream counter, but it still has 50 ice-cream flavours to choose from.

Namco Namja Town

Namco Namja Town

Above: Well, they say 50 flavours, but I can see 51 on the menu. Numbers aside, if you’ve ever wanted to try shark fin noodle ice-cream, Indian curry ice-cream, beef tongue ice-cream, golden-tomato-with-soy-bean-milk ice-cream, wasabi ice-cream or oyster gelato, this is where you’ll find it.

(If you’re more of a soft serve person, you can sometimes find interesting flavours at the Daily Chiko ice-cream shop in Nakano Broadway – it’s famous for selling enormous soft serves with up to 10 different flavours, and you can read my post about it by clicking here!)

Namco Namja Town

To make it easier, there are four pre-selected sets of six flavours that you can choose. None of them have the really weird flavours, but they do have some interesting and rather nice flavours. We tried the first set.

Namco Namja Town Ice Cream Parlor

The most unusual flavour that we tried was Hokkaido Shirataki potato ice-cream. They put a little bit of salt on it, and i basically tasted like a potato chip in ice-cream form. I actually really liked it, and if I go back there, I will probably order it again.

Namco Namja Town Ice Cream Set

With your ice-cream sampler set, they give you a little print-out of the flavours so you know what you’re eating. We liked everything in this set.
Haunted House

Namco Namja Town

We didn’t realise that there was a haunted house in Namja Town, so when we started walking through this area, we were really confused.

Namco Namja Town

There are games that you can place (for a fee) throughout the haunted house, but we didn’t bother (for starters, we were too busy being confused!).

Namco Namja Town

Namco Namja Town

In keeping with the Namja Town theme (whatever the theme is meant to be), there were plenty of creepy Navaju lanterns around the place.

Namco Namja Town

Would I recommend Namco Namja Town?
If you’re already going to Sunshine City for the purpose of visiting J-World Tokyo, then you may as well go to Namja Town too. Or if you happen to be in the area and have a burning desire to go to a gimmicky dumpling food court and/or you like the sound of some of those crazy ice-cream flavours. At 450 Yen per person (for adults), it won’t break the bank. If you’re not in the area, though, I wouldn’t necessarily recommend it, as Namja Town isn’t that exciting in and of itself. It left me pretty confused as to this day I don’t really understand the point of Namja Town, although I admit that if I ever find myself at Sunshine City again I might just pop in to get some salted potato ice-cream and a kawaii pastry from Patisserie Cute.

Note: I mentioned this earlier but I want to say it again just to make it really clear – the Gyoza Stadium is very much for people who eat pork. If you don’t eat pork then I recommend that you find somewhere else for lunch.

Cost: Tickets to Namco Namja Town vary in price depending on what you’re planning to do. If you’re simply looking to pay the entry fee, it’s 500 Yen for adults and 300 Yen for children (we paid 450 Yen each and I think it’s because we’re foreigners – they also gave us souvenir badges in exchange for filling out a survey).

There are other ‘passports’ that cover some of the attractions which cost a lot more. As far as I can tell, you’d probably want to be fluent in Japanese to make the most of these. Click here for the page on ticket pricing (it’s in Japanese so you may need to run it through Google Translate).

Website:
http://www.namco.co.jp/tp/namja/ (Japanese language only)
http://www.namco.co.jp/tp/namja/pdf/english_guide.pdf (English guide – PDF)

Address:
Toshima-ku, Tokyo Higashi-Ikebukuro 3-chome Sunshine City World Import Mart building second floor
(Level 2, Sunshine City shopping centre, Ikebukuro, Tokyo)

Phone:
03 5950 0765

Opening Hours:
10:00 – 22:00 (last admission 21:00)

How to get to Namco Namja Town:
Namco Namja Town is in the same shopping mall as J-World Tokyo, so the directions to Namja Town are exactly the same: There are a few train stations near the Sunshine City mall in Ikebukuro. We caught the train to Ikebukuro Station which is about a 10 minute walk to the Sunshine City shopping centre. Thanks to Google Maps, here is a map showing where Namja Town is (which is inside Sunshine City) in relation to Ikebukuro Station.

Directions for J-World Tokyo

 

 

 

 

 

3 thoughts on “Namco Namja Town: a theme park for cats, gyoza and ice-cream

  • Fantastic post! I love all the photographs. I was looking for information about this spot because I was considering visiting. Thanks for all the great info, Jessy

    Reply
    • appetiteforjapan

      Thanks for the comment, Jessy – I’m really glad to hear that this post has been of some help to you. If you decide to check out Namja Town while you’re in Japan, let me know what you think of it!

      Reply
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