Chashitsu Experience
茶室へようこそ!
Welcome to the teahouse! Feel free to explore at your leisure, and enjoy a relaxing time as you learn a little about the long-practiced noble art of Japanese 茶道, the way of tea.
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Hello there! I’m currently an exchange student in Japan. I am very grateful for the opportunity to share a little of my knowledge about Japanese tea ceremonies, by which I have long been fascinated, through a medium that I love (video games!...)
I’ve been very lucky to experience such things such as Japanese flower arrangement, calligraphy, and matcha drinking several times now, however on a student budget attending an all-out, bona-fide tea ceremony is certainly a little difficult. In creating the Chashitsu Experience, I hope to provide an alternative method of ‘visiting’ a Japanese tearoom, and maybe impart a little bit of knowledge about 茶道 along the way.
Please let me know if you learnt anything new, or if you have information of your own to share, I’d love to hear it! For now, I hope you enjoy the experience.
How To Play
Chashitsu Experience is a point-and-click, educational game. Explore your environment using the cursor and interact with objects to learn more about them. It can be played on both your computer’s browser, and on a Game Boy.
Controls
Keyboard | Gameboy | |
Move Cursor | Arrow Keys | D-Pad |
Interact/Confirm Choice | Z | A |
Return to Title | Shift | Select |
Start | Enter | Start |
For an extra relaxing experience, listen to your favourite calming music, or perhaps a nature soundscape, while playing .
Extra Notes
Chashitsu Experience is not meant to be a strict, historically accurate architectural representation of a teahouse, but rather focuses on aesthetics and imparting information in a fun way. Please excuse any historical inaccuracies, mish-mash of time-periods, etc.
One of my favourite teahouses of all time is Kodaiji’s beautiful Iho-an, situated in Kyoto. This is the teahouse seen at the beginning of the game. I have yet to visit it in person, but would certainly love to one day.
The tea bowl seen throughout the game is inspired directly by a Rakuware tea bowl with a plum blossom design, created by 10th generation Raku Tannyu.
The haikus in the game (randomly receive 1 of 6 when interacting with a special object!) are all written by haiku master Kobayashi Issa (whose name, 一茶, aptly translates to Cup-of-Tea). I included a few about tea specifically, but also one of my absolute favourites of Issa’s adorable haikus about a romantic cat in love – 猫の恋. I translated these myself, armed only with a language dictionary and intermediate Japanese proficiency, and hardly any knowledge of literary Japanese, so there may be some mistakes. Additionally, an attempt was made to preserve the 17-syllable haiku structure (aside from our favourite lover-cat; the translation I came up with conjured such cute imagery in my mind I couldn’t bear to change it), but they are definitely not perfect. Any suggestions or improvements on this aspect would be greatly appreciated! Japanese versions of these haikus were collected froma database of Issa’s works.
Most dialogue throughout the experience was written with the help of this site, and descriptions I collected at the Tokyo National Museum, which displays many tea objects as well as physical teahouses on the museum grounds. (TNM also offers free access to university students who attend a number of Japanese universities – if you are on an exchange or otherwise affiliated with these, I highly recommend a visit!
I drew all art for this game myself, except for the full detail views of the teahouse and Hashimoto Gaho’s painting ‘Cat in Bamboo Grove’. These were created using the Game Boy Graphics Toy.
Created using GB Studio as part of a university course.
Status | Released |
Platforms | HTML5 |
Rating | Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 total ratings) |
Author | chloe elanora |
Genre | Educational |
Made with | GB Studio |
Tags | art-cart, artgame, culture, Game Boy, Game Boy ROM, haiku, japan, Pixel Art, Point & Click, tea |
Average session | A few minutes |
Languages | English |
Inputs | Keyboard |
Download
Install instructions
The .gb game file is to be played on a physical gameboy.
Comments
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Short, sweet and to the point cozy experience. It reminded me of this video I recently saw of a Japanese tea maker from Paolo's day in the life series https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdqFeQ3x3XY
I was amazed at how beautifully the world of the sadou was represented in the Game Boy graphics.
I am Japanese, but I have never experienced the sadou. When I was a student, I visited the Kinkakuji Temple on a school excursion and peeked into the tea ceremony room from the outside. As an adult, I have only experienced tea ceremony in a Japanese-style room in Tokyo's Hamarikyu Gardens, where I enjoyed powdered green tea and tea sweets. So it was interesting to learn how to use tea utensils in detail in this work.
The tools used in the tea ceremony are amazing, but the behavior of the tea ceremony master is also very beautiful. I admire it.
By the way, my favorite route is to have matcha at Hamarikyu Gardens and take the water bus to Asakusa.
茶道の世界について、ゲームボーイのグラフィックで見事に表現されているのに驚きました。
私は日本人ですが茶道は体験したことがないです。学生時代に修学旅行で訪れた金閣寺で茶室を外から覗いたことや、大人になってからは東京の浜離宮恩賜庭園にある和室で抹茶とお茶菓子をいただくといった体験しかありませんでした。
なのでこの作品で詳しい茶道具の使い方を知ったのが面白かったです。
茶道は道具もすごいですが、茶道家の所作も美しくてよいですよね。憧れます。
それと、ちなみに浜離宮恩賜庭園で抹茶をいただき、水上バスで浅草に行くルートは私のお気に入り。
ライブ配信中にChashitsu Experienceをプレーしていただいてありがとうございます!次回日本に行ったら、浜離宮恩賜庭園で抹茶を飲もうと思っています〜〜
Thank you so much for enjoying Chashitsu Experience! I’m very honoured you played it during your livestream. The next time I go to Japan, I’ll have some matcha in Hamarikyu Gardens!!
Really nice little game, enjoyed it a lot.
Thank you very much! I'm glad you enjoyed ^.^