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the summit of the gods myojin nyuzaka

The Summit of the Gods

Tokyo

Episode
Ep. -
Time
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the summit of the gods myojin nyuzaka
  • Nearest Station: Ochanomizu Station (JR Chuo-Sobu Line / Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line)
  • Walk: 7 minutes on foot
  • Best time to visit: Late morning or early afternoon on a clear day for lighting similar to the open street view
  • Crowd level: Moderate
  • A quiet urban slope in Tokyo is shown in a subdued transitional moment, emphasizing the film's reflective mood.
  • This moment appears during the characters' movement through Tokyo, and rather than highlighting a dramatic event, it uses the quiet slope and urban atmosphere to reflect a heavy, contemplative state of mind. Since The Summit of the Gods is built around obsession, solitude, and pursuit, transitional scenes like this often serve as brief pauses after investigation, memory, or emotional reflection. The feeling here is restrained rather than explosive, carrying a slight tension and pressure that emphasizes the gap between the real city and the characters' inner worlds while building mood for later psychological turns. In real life, this scene corresponds to Myojin Nyuzaka in Chiyoda, Tokyo, and the anime reproduces the slope, street direction, and dense urban scale with notable accuracy. The downhill perspective, the close-set buildings, and the overall shape of the road are all easy to match on location. Some fine details such as signs, guardrails, utility poles, and corner fixtures may have changed over time, so the exact signage does not perfectly match the film, but the larger composition remains very recognizable. The anime also tones down the colors slightly to create a cooler, more controlled atmosphere, while the real location feels more everyday because of weather, parked vehicles, and the lived-in neighborhood setting. Compared with Street View or an on-foot visit, this is a realistic Tokyo slope scene rather than an exaggerated reconstruction.
Is Myojin Nyuzaka easy to access for anime pilgrimage visitors?
Yes. It is a public street in central Tokyo and can be reached on foot from Ochanomizu Station, with no entry fee or reservation required.
Can I take photos freely at the exact scene spot?
You can photograph the street from public space, but avoid blocking the narrow slope or filming private homes and parked vehicles too closely. Early daytime is best for safe, unobtrusive shooting.
Does the real location still match the film closely today?
Yes, the slope and overall street layout remain recognizable, though small details like signs, barriers, and roadside fixtures may differ from the anime and older Street View images.

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