In Uji (Japan, Region Kyoto) gibt es ein Café in einer sehr touristischen Gegend, in dem die Besucher/Kunden gebeten werden, einen Aufkleber an dem Ort anzubringen, aus dem sie kommen. Interessante Verteilung (wenn auch nicht überraschend) meiner Meinung nach.

    Von otzky_

    Share.

    27 Kommentare

    1. Source: Map in Café „増田茶舗 TEA STAND SHOP“ (Uji, Japan)
      Tool: Camera

    2. Robofcourse on

      It would be quite interesting if people put where they are really from. Look at Greenland, Northern Russia, etc.

    3. CuriousOnePlus on

      BS. There’s literally no one living in the interior of Australia, it’s arid and uninhabited even by First Nations people.

      There’s no water. No electricity. No food. No fuel.

    4. I assume most of the stickers in Greenland are from Americans who learned geography in American schools.

    5. Either the workers purposefully planted stickers in random places at the beginning so it doesnt seem empty or they get a lot of troll answers.

      There is no way inland greenland has that many tourists come there, or pretty much all of africa. The dots are too neat too

    6. Given the average American’s grasp of basic geography, this map could mean anything.

    7. AlwaysBeQuestioning on

      Most likely a bunch of these will be randomly placed by people who thought it’d be funny or who wanted to put it somewhere unique rather than truthful.

      – There are so few people living in Greenland and almost all live on the coast.

      – Some stickers are in the middle of the Sahara. There are settlements there, but those people are very unlikely to end up in a random cafe in Japan. Let alone it happening multiple times for multiple different settlements.

      .

      Those were the ones that stood out to me. The rest can be ascribed to “trying their best” and a little inaccuracy. For the USA, Europe and (South)East Asia this looks like a population density map, which makes sense because those countries are wealthy enough that the median person can afford to be a global tourist. In South America you can clearly see country capitals plus Rio and São Paulo.

      New Zealand is a little close to Oz.

    8. What’s the point if you’re going to fake it.

      We got people living in Northeast Greenland (that’s a national park, nobody lives there). Also so many Greenland pins, and not a single person bothered to actually put it in Nuuk.

      4 pins on Svalbard, only 1 in Longyearbyen. Nobody lives on the east coast.

      Nobody lives on Franz Josef Land or Severnaya Zemlya either.

      People living in uninhabited Nunvaut and even in the middle of the Hudson Bay.

      That pin southwest of Chile makes no sense. Nothing there.

      Africa is way too neatly distributed, they just didn’t even bother to make it look real.

    9. ProffesorSpitfire on

      I seriously doubt this Japanese cafe had 14 visitors from Greenland, none of which were from the capital Nuuk, which makes up almost 30% of the population.

    10. BaBaBaBaconbitz on

      I thought Hawaii was just a jumble of extra stickers to use at first lol

    11. Low_Cut_368 on

      South East Asia is definitely over represented, which reflects their relative geographical proximity. Other than that it’s exactly as expected

    12. Cool to know only one sticker is from where I’m from! Thats pretty awesome

    13. Ive been there and some of the spots are so condensed it created a yellow sticker mountain so I put mine somewhere random ☠️

    14. AmericainaLyon on

      Don’t think anyone’s mentioned Mexico yet, but I also highly doubt there were that many Mexican visitors, and if there were, about half would be concentrated from CDMX.

    15. Mathyoublake on

      Are there actually livable places down at the bottom left of the map where those random couple dots are??

    16. Average_Guava on

      Some of those pins are BS, because no one lives on the ice cap of Greenland lol

    Leave A Reply