Last Updated on 06/01/2022 by てんしょく飯
PewDiePie, the world’s number one YouTube channel subscriber, reports on his first steps after moving to Japan.
PewDiePie living in Tokyo
Swedish YouTuber PewDiePie, who is number one in the world for personal accounts with over 110 million YouTube channel subscribers, has made his long-awaited move to Japan.
He had announced that he had purchased a house in Japan in October 2019, but a new coronavirus pandemic interrupted his plans. However, in May 2022, he reported that he had finally completed his move to Japan, and showed his wife, Marzia Bisonin, a former YouTuber with over 7.4 million subscribers, and their two dogs as they headed home from the airport and rented a car to enjoy the Tokyo life.
He updated his video again. He is enjoying his daily life in Japan.
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Pewdiepie tells us about Japan
From the scenes of their home that Marzia showed on Instagram and the fact that they bought plants in the previous video, it is clear that they both like to grow plants. In this video as well, they first headed to a home improvement center and bought vegetable seedlings. They were also impressed by the kitchen garbage bag for quickly disposing of kitchen waste, and commented that it was clever.
Since moving to Japan, Pewdiepie seems to be driving a car with high frequency. This time, she was seen driving on the highway several times, and even seems to be able to drive on highways, which many people find scary. He also talked about the situation in Japan with a laugh, saying that even though it is not mandatory, everyone in town wears masks, and if they do not, they attract stares, so they wear them themselves.
He also said that he had just finished moving to a new house, and he had adopted a polite behavior that an increasing number of Japanese do not practice these days. He greeted his neighbors!
Pewdiepie asked Tokidoki Traveller, an Australian YouTuber living in Japan named Emma, to help him pick out some souvenirs, and then he went to greet his new neighbors. I was nervous. I was nervous, at least I was. But I was fine. (The neighbors were very nice. I heard that older people in Japan are afraid of foreigners, so I was a little nervous, but they were very nice.
He felt that the move-in greeting was a good opportunity to get acquainted with his neighbors, and said, “It was good. It was a big step forward,” he said.
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