by AlexAplin
3 subcomments
- JR East is already in the process of eliminating departure melodies as they transition to one-man station operations, so these will unfortunately be gone sooner than later. The Nambu and Joban lines got rid of them last year and it looks like the Yamanote is scheduled for them to be gone by 2030 [1].
I'm sure they can figure out a way to trigger custom melodies with RFID or similar eventually. Keikyu figured out how to recreate their departure boards [2]. JR might be less willing to come up with something immediately given the optics around automating someone out of a job.
[1] https://japantoday.com/category/features/travel/jr-east-axes...
[2] https://soranews24.com/2026/07/04/japanese-train-company-bri...
- I haven't even been to Japan yet and this feels nostalgic haha. I can only imagine how it feels to those who are more familiar with it.
by coopykins
1 subcomments
- Please, add an option to make the 'travel' between stations longer to give a vibe of an actual train trip!
by prodigycorp
1 subcomments
- I initially brushed this off as being a clone of yamanot.es. I was wrong, this is delightful. As others said, please add longer train sounds between stations.
- Hardcore fans may like the BVE train sim [1]. A lot of Japanese fan-made lines (add-ons) with custom sounds. Generally speaking, the game is far from AAA, but the "hand-made" feel makes up for that.
The downside is that sometimes it is difficult to install addons or to figure out their custom features because the instructions are often poorly translated from Japanese and websites often have no English translations at all. One should also note that some addons include and run "homemade" DLLs to implement custom features.
It seems that the community is on the decline though, because while searching around I have found a lot of dead links. One can try OpenBVE [2] (partially compatible with BVE), which is less Japan-centric but should have some Japanese lines.
[1] https://bvets.net/en/
[2] https://openbve-project.net/
- I love this :) Thanks very much for making it, it's elegantly designed.
Since you asked for feedback: in terms of usability, I found the 'seek next' and 'seek previous' buttons confusing, since they're positioned left/right but control motion up/down, and even switch their direction based on loop. (This is because "forward" and "back" also change based on loop -- an indicator for that would help.) Adding navigation via mouse wheel would be perfect here too.
Sorry to ask for even more, but I'd personally love to see door opening / door closing sounds added (along with 'ドアが閉まります' and the alarm) to fully round out the soundscape.
Don't mean to be too picky! -- it's very enjoyable as is.
- This is lovely - I used to use YouTube recordings of Yamanote line trips as a way to fall asleep.
As a small bit of feedback - from the sleep perspective, the melodies and door chimes seem quite loud and frequent - would love an even more "backgroundy" version where the ambient travel sections are longer, and those chimes and melodies are quieter. Perhaps even with masking of human noises.
- Super cool and close to my heart, albeit not the Yamanote line for me.
There is an episode of Our Man in Japan with James May where he spends an admittedly short moment with the composer of some(all?) of these melodies. It's a surprisingly thoughtful process, he tries to capture the feeling of the station and area in a short motif. Some of these motifs can contain surprising musicality and complexity, despite being so short.
- I'm also a fan of the Yamanote Line.
I made a psychedelic AI audio-visual collage inspired by it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwUSzUvShqcaa
I made field recordings during my last stay in Tokyo. From those, I made a song for each station of the Yamanote line, using the Jingle in the prompt. The visuals were made similarly.
Used mainly Suno, Udio, Runway and Ableton Live.
by carloseduardopx
0 subcomment
- Man, this is great! Like you, when I travel to Japan I just love the Yamanote line too. Sometimes I use YouTube videos as white noise while working. I know it's strange, but it gives some kind of peace. This would be perfect for me if only the ambient length were longer.
- This is really cool. Actually reading this while on the yamanote line going to work!
by johncoltrane
0 subcomment
- Group policy sadly doesn't like newly registered domains so I can't check this one out right now but it immediately reminded me of this one, that I favorited 4 years ago:
https://yamanote.style/
- This is very cool. Brings back memories of when I travelled to Japan 10+ years ago. Thanks!
- Made a similar thing a few years ago as an app! https://apps.apple.com/us/app/ueno/id1658845856
by stereo-highway
1 subcomments
- Nice, I just visited Japan a couple of months ago.
I wish this was binaural. I still vividly remember hearing this video[1] from the Verge published almost 11 years ago.
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Gpl99s02Aw
- That “install as app” pop up after the first station is clearly unnecessary and utilises a dark pattern - “not now” button is painted like it is disabled. Please don’t do like that.
- This is really cool! Really give a immersion vibe.
I've built something different, Tokyo Train Orchestra (http://tokyo-train-orchestra.netlify.app/) It uses live and scheduled tokyo train/subway timetable to produce music.
- No real feedback other than it's pretty awesome. It'd be cool to have a version of the display above the doors that shows the upcoming stations, but I'm not sure in practice if that would be that useful since I assume most people would have that in the background as you point out.
- What an incredibly detailed and calming project! I am really impressed with how you connected so many different audio materials to create a final PWA product. The very fact that it works offline and acts like a native application is enough to make it a great background soundtrack for focused work.
I saw your mentioning of Claude Code as a means for handling PWA backend and offline caching issues. As a person who usually creates everything manually, I am willing to find out how it went for you. Did this solution manage to master the technical side of Service Workers and caching techniques at once or did it take a lot of iterations to get everything in order?
- I went for the first time a month ago and that brings a lot of good memories, thank you!
- I love this, thank you! I wasn't aware the melodies are different by direction of travel.
by mune2gu-chan
0 subcomment
- This is great. Listening to this instantly takes me back to when I rode the Yamanote line a few months ago.
by anorphirith
0 subcomment
- it’s great if we could increase the ambient sound time frame to simulate the real time between stations, it’s eerie to hear stations that fast
by 7373737373
0 subcomment
- https://youtube.com/watch?v=y549gDNLxQU
by mrspacejam
0 subcomment
- Love your site and tokyo.fyi I saw recently. Japan is an amazing country.
- What are you doing? vibe coding and listing to how what on train speakers in tokyo.
- Wow! This is really cool. I feel like I were already in Japan when the melody first hit.
- I love the Gui!
- Really well done. Love how much care went into this.
by znagengast
0 subcomment
- Takes me back immediately, really cool!
- this is very concerning
by popalchemist
0 subcomment
- I love this! Great UI, and the spirit of it is very early web. Thanks for making this. Totally captures the feel of Tokyo!
- Way cool nice!
by KristianLentino
0 subcomment
- I loovveee it, I've been in japan 4 times and those sounds are nostalgic ahhahaha
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