There's a reason I deliberately went with hotel health (hotel health) in Tokyo this time. I'd been on an esthetic kick lately, so I wanted a change of genre for once. Ikebukuro Nishiguchi de SUGEEE Motomerareru Ore no Karada is a hotel health shop in the Ikebukuro north-exit / west-exit area, open 10:00 a.m.–midnight.
I picked the 80-minute course at ¥7,000.
Grading it against 17 years of experience
I've been involved with this world for 17 years, up to age 39. Using that experience as my yardstick, where does tonight's Ikebukuro Nishiguchi de SUGEEE Motomerareru Ore no Karada land? I'll write it straight.
Quality of reception: tonight lands in the top 30%. A shop where the phone staff nails all three—able to listen, able to explain, able to hand you options—isn't common even across 17 years. A reception desk that can lay out multiple girls and describe what makes each one distinct is carrying a lot of information.
First impression of the girl: a hit. The gap between the phone description and the real thing was small. That match rate is a direct readout of how well the shop is managed. Shops where photo and reality diverge don't last. I think the reason Ikebukuro Nishiguchi de SUGEEE Motomerareru Ore no Karada has stayed open in Tokyo is that the gap is small.
How the 80 minutes were used: the atmosphere shifted between the first and second halves, building density toward the end. It felt like "designed time." A girl who reads your reactions and changes the arc accordingly isn't common, even across 17 years of these visits.
Overall: I'd put it in the top 20–25% of everything I've experienced over 17 years. That's a high mark. The biggest factor driving that grade was the girl's powers of observation. Using your first-half reactions in the second half—the odds of running into that skill aren't great. Tonight, in a Tokyo hotel health shop, I drew it. ¥7,000 for 80 minutes. Worth putting on the record.
Start with the price
¥7,000 for 80 minutes. You can't judge anything off that number alone. What matters is the ratio against "what you got."
Looking back on the Ikebukuro Nishiguchi de SUGEEE Motomerareru Ore no Karada experience, my verdict on ¥7,000 is "fair." Not expensive, not cheap—fair in the sense that the content backed it up.
About the girl
An 80-minute course at a Tokyo hotel health shop. The girl was someone who understood her own job as a pro. Confirming the steps, following up on my reactions, managing the clock—experience showed in all of it.
My criteria for picking this shop
When picking Ikebukuro Nishiguchi de SUGEEE Motomerareru Ore no Karada, I weigh "consistency between reception and the girl." If the phone description matches the impression of the person who shows up, that's a sign the shop is properly run. This time, that consistency was high.
Ikebukuro north-exit / west-exit area, 10:00 a.m.–midnight.
The bottom line
| Category | Rating |
|---|---|
| Phone reception | ★★☆☆☆ |
| Arrival speed | ★★☆☆☆ |
| First impression of the girl | ★★★☆☆ |
| Service | ★★☆☆☆ |
| Value | ★★☆☆☆ |
| Would repeat | Depends |
Next time I'm in Tokyo, I'll probably call Ikebukuro Nishiguchi de SUGEEE Motomerareru Ore no Karada again.
Related: Tokyo-area adult-entertainment info is collected on the area page. And if you're researching shop advertising and customer acquisition, FAP — Comparing Hotel Health and Delivery Health Ads is worth a look.