Chainsaw Man Hot Spring Travel |best|

If you are looking for an official "travel" experience, there have been several collaborations in Japan: Chainsaw Man: Hot Spring Travel

Imagine a traditional ryokan (Japanese inn) perched on a misty mountainside, its wooden balconies overlooking a steaming river of geothermal water. The sign outside reads Yukemuri no Yado (Steam-Spraying Inn) — but the steam smells faintly of rust and old blood. The innkeeper is a frail old woman who never blinks. The other guests? None. Just you, the Public Safety Devil Hunters, and the creeping sense that the onsen is fed by the tears of a dead devil. Chainsaw Man Hot Spring Travel

The fan-made game captures the "slice-of-life" moments often missed in the chaotic main series: If you are looking for an official "travel"

If you are looking for an official "travel" experience, there have been several collaborations in Japan: Chainsaw Man: Hot Spring Travel

Imagine a traditional ryokan (Japanese inn) perched on a misty mountainside, its wooden balconies overlooking a steaming river of geothermal water. The sign outside reads Yukemuri no Yado (Steam-Spraying Inn) — but the steam smells faintly of rust and old blood. The innkeeper is a frail old woman who never blinks. The other guests? None. Just you, the Public Safety Devil Hunters, and the creeping sense that the onsen is fed by the tears of a dead devil.

The fan-made game captures the "slice-of-life" moments often missed in the chaotic main series: