MauriceMoves has spent serious time traveling lean, and in this video he drops one of the more genuinely useful Tokyo travel tips you’ll find anywhere: skip the expensive hotels and stay at a manga cafe instead. With Tokyo hotel prices running $150-$300+ per night during busy periods, this is the kind of local-knowledge shortcut that can dramatically cut the cost of a Japan trip without sacrificing comfort.
The video walks through the Hailey5 Cafe in Tokyo — a modern manga cafe that doubles as overnight accommodation. Maurice covers pricing, check-in, the shower situation, amenities, and how to actually book a spot. He also gives an honest take on the limitations and what to expect going in. If you’re heading to Japan and wondering why your accommodation budget is being eaten alive, this 9-minute video is worth watching before you book anything.
Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video
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- Unbound Merino Women’s Compact Travel Hoodie – Purchase on Amazon
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Editor’s Insight
The premise of this video is simple but the execution is sharp. Maurice isn’t telling you to sleep in a hostel dorm or rough it — he’s pointing you toward a specifically Japanese institution that’s been hiding in plain sight for decades: the manga cafe. These establishments (manga kissa or netto kafe in Japanese) started as places to read comics and use the internet, but evolved to include private booths, showers, unlimited soft drinks, and overnight stays at prices that make even budget hotels look expensive by comparison.
Hailey5 Cafe is the specific location Maurice highlights, and what makes this video useful is that he actually stays there and walks through every step of the experience: how to book it, what check-in looks like as a non-Japanese speaker, how the shower process works, what the sleeping setup is really like. This isn’t someone speculating from a blog post — it’s firsthand documentation of a real stay.
The pricing context is important. Tokyo hotel prices have climbed sharply in recent years, partly due to increased international tourism demand and partly due to the weaker yen driving more foreign visitors. During peak periods like cherry blossom season or major holidays, finding a decent hotel under $150/night in a central Tokyo neighborhood is a genuine challenge. A manga cafe in Shinjuku or similar central areas can run a fraction of that — often $25-$50 for an overnight stay — while still giving you a private space, a hot shower, free drinks, and fast internet.
The Unbound Merino sponsorship is well-matched to this kind of content. Maurice’s travel philosophy is explicitly about packing light and moving freely — and merino wool is one of the few clothing materials that actually enables that approach in practice. Merino resists odor better than synthetic fabrics and manages temperature across a wider range, which means fewer pieces of clothing for the same number of days. The T-Shirt and Travel Hoodie combination he recommends is a solid two-piece base for a carry-on-only Japan trip.
For anyone who hasn’t traveled to Japan before: the “3-star Google review” point Maurice makes in this video is genuinely useful context. Japanese review culture tends toward honest, measured assessments rather than the polarized five-star or one-star reviews that dominate Western platforms. A 3.5-star rating on Google Maps in Japan often reflects a place that’s clean, functional, and fairly priced — not a place to avoid. This local knowledge difference catches a lot of first-time Japan visitors off guard.
He also mentions Manboo Shinjuku as an alternative manga cafe option, which gives the viewer a backup if Hailey5 is full or doesn’t fit their location. Both are worth bookmarking before any Tokyo trip.
The broader takeaway here is about travel flexibility and local knowledge. Tokyo rewards travelers who do their research and step slightly outside the tourist infrastructure. The manga cafe is one example — but the same principle applies to the convenience store food culture, the local train system, and the neighborhood izakayas that aren’t listed on any Western travel site. MauriceMoves’ travel content consistently surfaces this kind of genuinely useful, non-obvious information, and this video is a good example of why the channel is worth following for anyone who travels with intention.
Watch the full video for the complete walkthrough — Maurice’s delivery makes the whole thing feel approachable even if you’ve never considered this kind of accommodation before.
Closing Remarks
If Tokyo is on your travel list and you’re staring down hotel prices that don’t make sense, this video offers a practical, tested alternative that most Western travel guides won’t mention. The manga cafe isn’t for everyone, but for the right traveler — especially someone packing light with Unbound Merino in their bag — it’s a genuinely smart option. Drop a comment below if you’ve tried this in Tokyo or have your own accommodation hack from Japan. Affiliate links above support the site at no cost to you.





