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I will go to japan and I will find or take a Gyaru to be my wife. we will live happily in my bunker in out in the wilderness in Sartoria.
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@CentaurBreeder As a Japanese, I should tell you this ...
Seriously, Kuro (黒:black) Gyaru, as in your photo, became extinct over a decade ago.
On the other hand, Shiro (白:white) Gyaru can be found in various places. (Now, they tend not to call themselves Gyaru.)
I recommend you visit Shibuya or Harajuku. I hope you find a good girl👍
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@harukan I did not know this. Thank you friend!
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@harukan @CentaurBreeder dire need!
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@MischievousTomato @harukan so true tomato bro
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@CentaurBreeder @MischievousTomato
щ(゚Д゚щ) Come on!!
The current USD-JPY rate is about $1 = ¥130.
Japanese Big Mac price is ¥410 = $3.10
It means you could travel to Japan on a lower budget than expected😏
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@harukan @CentaurBreeder Is it true that most people in Japan dress formal because of their jobs?
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@PvtProperty @CentaurBreeder Yes, most Japanese office workers must dress formally. This is based on Japanese conventional wisdom. Recently, more and more companies have allowed casual clothing.
I also have to wear my suit in my office every day, too. I'd like to move to a more casual company🥺
But the guys in your photo seem to be college students looking for jobs because everyone is wearing the same black suit, and that suit is not much for their body size. We can see those scenes in the job-hunting seminar or something.
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@harukan @CentaurBreeder Ah okay. Thanks for the info. I personally think its kinda neat that people dress formally there
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Depends on the type of company.
Most office jobs are like that, although there is quite an exception when it comes to coding jobs where they allow you to dress more casually in many places, or game dev companies that often don't even have a dress code at all.
Although in most cases, you're still expected to come in a suit for job interviews regardless of dress code.
And this is one blessing about the whole scamdemic, because in online interviews you can just dress mostly however the fuck you want, because they won't be able to see anything other than your head and a tiny bit of clothing anyway.
So just some white Adidas T-shirt can easily be mistaken for a office nerd shirt for example.
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Although sometimes the less formal companies can get a bit awkward sometimes.
Like how I had a client just a few months ago which promoted itself as high class, so I came in a black suit while everyone else was wearing a One Piece shirt, or a Hatsune Miku shirt, or some parker, or a maid dress.
I was like, "MOTHER FUCKER!!".
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@ryo @ryo Thank you for your detailed explanation🤣
I’m a software engineer, but our company's customers are very strict about clothing. Then I have to be wearing a formal suit😭