📍 Akihabara

Where to play card games in Tokyo: Pokémon, Magic, Yu-Gi-Oh & One Piece TCG

How a foreign visitor finds and joins a TCG tournament in Tokyo this week — the best Akihabara shops, how shop events work, the OCG-vs-TCG card trap, and how to sign up despite the language barrier.

Yes, foreigners can play

Japanese card shops run frequent in-store tournaments ('locals'), and visitors are welcome to join. In practice you sign up at the venue 30–60 minutes before start, pay a small entry fee (often a few hundred yen), and play. Events run in Japanese, but the games are universal and communities are generally welcoming.

The best Akihabara shops

  • Hareruya Akihabara — Japan's largest Magic: The Gathering chain, daily events, and an English-language website with English event listings (the most foreigner-friendly option).
  • Hareruya2 Akihabara Tower — a whole building for the Pokémon TCG, 152 play seats, daily tournaments, English site.
  • BIG MAGIC — a large multi-game shop (Magic, Pokémon, Yu-Gi-Oh and more) and a registered Pokémon Card Gym, on the 9th floor of Radio Kaikan.
  • Card Rush Akihabara — multi-game (Pokémon, Yu-Gi-Oh, One Piece, Magic) with a ~45-seat duel space, seconds from the station.

Know before you buy: OCG vs TCG

Yu-Gi-Oh has two separate games: the OCG (Japanese cards, played in Japan) and the international TCG (English). They are not cross-compatible and have different banlists — Japanese OCG cards generally can't be used in official TCG events back home. Magic is globally standardized, so cards bought in Japan are tournament-legal worldwide. Pokémon played in Japan uses Japanese (OCG) cards. The One Piece Card Game (Bandai) is hugely popular and widely stocked.

Finding an event this week

  1. Pokémon — use the official store/event search at pokemon-card.com (look for イベント検索 / event search).
  2. Magic — Hareruya's event pages, or the Wizards Play Network locator.
  3. One Piece — the official events page at onepiece-cardgame.com.
  4. Yu-Gi-Oh — Konami's official event finder.
  5. Or just follow the shops on X (Twitter) — Hareruya, Hareruya2, BIG MAGIC and Card Rush post weekly schedules. Google Translate makes the Japanese sites and sign-up sheets usable.

Preguntas frecuentes

Can a tourist join a Pokémon/Magic tournament in Tokyo?
Yes. Shop tournaments are open to walk-ups — arrive 30–60 minutes early, pay a small fee at the counter, and play. Events are in Japanese but the game is universal. Hareruya (Magic) and Hareruya2 (Pokémon) even run English websites.
Can I use Japanese cards in tournaments back home?
Magic: yes, it's globally standardized. Yu-Gi-Oh: no — Japan plays the OCG, which is not legal in the international TCG and has a different banlist. Pokémon in Japan uses Japanese-language cards.
How do I find an event happening this week?
Use each game's official event search (Pokémon: pokemon-card.com; One Piece: onepiece-cardgame.com; Yu-Gi-Oh: Konami; Magic: Hareruya/WPN), or follow shops like Hareruya, BIG MAGIC and Card Rush on X for weekly schedules.
The OTAKU COMPASS Desk
  • Otaku culture editor

On-the-ground coverage of otaku Japan — shops, cafés, events.

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