Japan opened what organizers are billing as the world’s first “otaku” summit yesterday, drawing visitors from around the world as the country looks to boost the international fan base for Japanese comic books and anime.
So-called otaku — usually translated as “geeks” — from at least 18 countries and territories, many dressed as their favorite anime characters, converged on the Otaku Expo at a convention center near Tokyo for the two-day event.
The expo is part of a special comic book fair held every five years, which attracts about half a million visitors, but this year’s event marks the first time that groups from outside Japan have been invited. About 50 overseas otaku groups were expected to attend.
Photo: AFP
Briton Katie Carter, 23, was dressed as Usagi Tsukino, a character from the popular Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon.
“This is amazing. There are so many people of different cultures are coming together,” she said.
The culture of otaku has grown into a major industry in Japan.
The term is commonly used in the country to refer to people obsessed with Japan’s unique take on comics and animation.
While it once carried a negative connotation, many otaku are now proudly displaying their love for two-dimensional heroes — while the number of foreign fans is also soaring.
“The number of foreign visitors has been increasing over recent years,” Comic Market Committee spokesperson Kahoru Yasuda said.
Otaku culture is spreading worldwide “like a big snowball picking up a pace,” Carter said.
“In my country, Italy, currently it’s a very big thing,” expo visitor Valentino Notari, 28, said about the otaku culture outside Japan.
“It used to be much smaller — we used to be sort of outcasts when we started back then about 10 years ago, and now it’s becoming massive,” Notari said. “It’s quite fun and nowadays everybody accepts it.”
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