English-speaking deriheru in Tokyo

Alex007

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Hello,

Could anyone recommend some English-speaking deriheru agencies in Tokyo? I mean - agencies that would accept my reservation in English (over the phone or on LINE).

From what I have read in this forum, most of members are so fluent in Japanese (I almost feel having joined a linguists' forum :) that they do not have this problem. But I have, and possibly, some other members, too.

The main issue to me is making a reservation. Talking with the girl afterwards is not an issue - everyone can learn basic phrases and, if need be, "Google translate" will help out.

Thank you.
 
most of members are so fluent in Japanese
Not really. There is a small percentage from each group that speak Basic, Intermediate and Advanced Japanese. There's probably a greater number at the basic level or only a few words.

everyone can learn basic phrases
This is what most people have done to facilitate making a booking. You only need basic phrases to get through a booking.
(Basic entails: knowing place names, dates, days of the week, time of day and being able to read the hiragana/katakana on a menu for service time & options is a great help)
 
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The shop you asked about in the other thread, Delice, has much higher Japanese language requirements than most. A lot of shops - especially delivery - don't really care if you have advanced Japanese as long as you can muddle through through the process. The few places that do book entirely in English are usually charging a lot more. If you look around, they're often "subcontracting" for Japanese shops, where you can book with the exact same girl at 1/2 to 2.3 the price.

The Japanese necessary to make a booking, as @TAG Manager points out, isn't that advanced - it's about on par with being able to make an order at McDonald's without pointing at the menu, if you can do that, you can probably book with a delivery joint. Just don't go overboard with practicing at McD's, not good for the waistline. ;)

And if the shop won't take your booking, don't sweat it - there's another one out there that will.
 
You can always practice by making restaurant reservations. If you can get through that you can probably make it through a dh reservation albeit with a bit more struggle.
It's easy once you pick up on the important vocab and phrases.
Sometimes you have to get out of your comfort zone to get into some REAL comfort zones.
 
Other people here will likely have better answers than me, but a good place to start would be Asian Mystique. I've never used them personally, but there's more than enough reviews that you can make an educated opinion without needing mine. Several reviews mention booking in English.

Here's their site: https://www.asianmystique.com

And here's a list of the reviews done by members of this forum: https://tokyoadultguide.com/forums/escort-service-reviews.6/?prefix_id=5&o=date
Thank you! That is a great help!
 
The shop you asked about in the other thread, Delice, has much higher Japanese language requirements than most. A lot of shops - especially delivery - don't really care if you have advanced Japanese as long as you can muddle through through the process. The few places that do book entirely in English are usually charging a lot more. If you look around, they're often "subcontracting" for Japanese shops, where you can book with the exact same girl at 1/2 to 2.3 the price.

The Japanese necessary to make a booking, as @TAG Manager points out, isn't that advanced - it's about on par with being able to make an order at McDonald's without pointing at the menu, if you can do that, you can probably book with a delivery joint. Just don't go overboard with practicing at McD's, not good for the waistline. ;)

And if the shop won't take your booking, don't sweat it - there's another one out there that will.
Thank you! I will follow your advice!
 
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Not really. There is a small percentage from each group that speak Basic, Intermediate and Advanced Japanese. There's probably a greater number at the basic level or only a few words.


This is what most people have done to facilitate making a booking. You only need basic phrases to get through a booking.
(Basic entails: knowing place names, dates, days of the week, time of day and being able to read the hiragana/katakana on a menu for service time & options is a great help)
Thank you! That is encouraging! Of course, I can prepare basic phrases in advance.
 
The shop you asked about in the other thread, Delice, has much higher Japanese language requirements than most. A lot of shops - especially delivery - don't really care if you have advanced Japanese as long as you can muddle through through the process. The few places that do book entirely in English are usually charging a lot more. If you look around, they're often "subcontracting" for Japanese shops, where you can book with the exact same girl at 1/2 to 2.3 the price.

The Japanese necessary to make a booking, as @TAG Manager points out, isn't that advanced - it's about on par with being able to make an order at McDonald's without pointing at the menu, if you can do that, you can probably book with a delivery joint. Just don't go overboard with practicing at McD's, not good for the waistline. ;)

And if the shop won't take your booking, don't sweat it - there's another one out there that will.
Thank you! Indeed, I am not into foreigner-oriented agencies that tend to overcharge, but rather normal derheru I will do some homework and give a try.
 
You can always practice by making restaurant reservations. If you can get through that you can probably make it through a dh reservation albeit with a bit more struggle.
It's easy once you pick up on the important vocab and phrases.
Sometimes you have to get out of your comfort zone to get into some REAL comfort zones.
A good advice, thanks! I have not yet done real restaurant reservations so far, but I am sure I could. I will need to prepare replies to likely questions from dh staff.