Vol. 01 · Japan & Korea

Japan & Korea
through European eyes.

Notes from a Belgian traveler

Why do trains run on time, cities feel safer and corner stores taste better - and what could Europe learn from any of it? This is a slow, honest look at two countries that quietly do a lot of things differently.

Filed fromTokyo · Seoul · Brussels
TopicsCulture · Transport · Daily life
CadenceSlow & considered
AngleWhat Europe can learn
The Blog

Long reads, slowly considered.

The first piece is on its way.

Long-form essays will land here soon.

Field tips

Small, useful, and quick to read.

The things you actually wish you knew before flying out - payment cards that work, polite habits, queues, food allergies.

No tips logged yet.

Short field observations will collect here as I write them.

The Atlas

City notes - with maps soon.

Each city below will get its own page with a hand-curated map: the restaurants worth the detour, the calmest cafés, the markets with real things to bring home. Maps are coming in the next update.

  • Tokyo
    Kantō, Japan

    Where almost everything quietly works.

    Map · coming soon6 pieces
  • Kyoto
    Kansai, Japan

    The old capital - slow mornings, careful detail.

    Map · coming soon3 pieces
  • Osaka
    Kansai, Japan

    Friendlier. Hungrier. Less polished, on purpose.

    Map · coming soon2 pieces
  • Seoul
    South Korea

    Fast, digital, deeply convenient - and a bit intense.

    Map · coming soon4 pieces
  • Busan
    South Korea

    Coastal, looser, the breath after Seoul.

    Map · coming soon1 piece
Colophon
Written by
Estelle, a Belgian
marketer & traveler.

“Coming from Brussels, the things that surprised me weren’t the obvious ones. It wasn’t the speed or the neon. It was how small details add up to something quietly civic - a city that respects you back.”

This blog isn’t a top-ten list. It’s a slow read on why Japan and South Korea do certain things differently - and what Europe (and Belgium specifically) could quietly borrow. Personal observations, cultural context, and the practical bits in between.