/r/OsakaTravel is the place for everything related to travel and short-term stays in Osaka.
As I said in the title, the more locals who help ask questions over there, the better. Locals and long timers have the knowledge we need. Please join /r/OsakaTravel and /r/USJ and add your knowledge. We need you.
by OsakaWilson
4 comments
The separation of these subs has been positive for all three topics. One of the main positive things about having travel and USJ topics in their own subs is we don’t have people constantly complaining about them.
For /r/osakatravel and /r/USJ, it is very nice that the only people replying to questions are those people who choose to be there because they enjoy being helpful. It is a refreshing difference.
The negative point is that although each sub is has over 100 participants, that is still not a lot, especially for some of the niche questions. In /r/Osaka, for the niche questions, even though they may get some grief from the general users, they’d often reach that 1 in a 1000 person also interested in their niche topic. We’re not there yet.
That’s why I want to encourage everyone who likes helping others out, I am obviously in that category, please come and add your voice.
And read this before you come!
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=osaka%21+osaka%21+jensen&crid=98CGQZ1GL5DJ&sprefix=osaka+osaka+jensen%2Caps%2C407&ref=nb_sb_noss
Maybe we are looking at this backwards. Osaka should be the travel subreddit and we should just make an OsakaLife sub for residents. It may seem like an inconvenience for more people that way, but honestly, I’m tired of people complaining about visitors coming to the sub because tourists are looking for advice from locals.
Hi there!
I’m looking for a nice place for my family to stay (4 adults 1 child) in October. Only requirements are it needs to be two rooms and budget is around 200,000 for 2 weeks.
I’m planning to check [booking.com](https://booking.com) as well as many others but any personal recommendations based on experience would be great. Thank you!