There’s a genre of World Cup content that has almost nothing to do with soccer, and Japan’s traveling supporters have cornered it completely. The matches are happening, of course. Japan is currently in Texas competing on one of the sport’s grandest stages, and has already pulled off a minor miracle, rallying from two goals down to secure a draw against the Netherlands. But somewhere between Dallas and Arlington, the algorithm decided that the real story was Japanese people discovering Texas Roadhouse.
One clip has become the unofficial mission statement for the whole phenomenon. A Japanese supporter beams into a phone camera in Arlington and announces, “I can not speak English, but … I am exciting!!!!”
It’s difficult to imagine a more accurate summary of this World Cup’s parallel internet.
As clips pile up — Japanese fans reacting to Walmart, mechanical bulls, school buses, unordered chips and salsa — a general consensus has formed: No one is having a better week in Texas than the Japanese.
One Japanese fan posted on X on what was billed as day seven of their World Cup trip, raving about the bread at Texas Roadhouse.
【W杯旅行 7日目④】
テキサス・ロードハウス(Texas Roadhouseここも日本未上陸!!アメリカで大人気のステーキ・カジュアルダイニング
ステーキが主役なんだけど最初に出てきたパンがぶっ飛ぶくらい美味しかったえ、ヤバい。美味しすぎてテイクアウトした#クレグルメ#クレ旅#W杯 pic.twitter.com/iUZ6CQd1Xc
— グルメなクレ(旧:にわかなクレ) (@cule_1125) June 13, 2026
Translation: This place hasn’t landed in Japan yet!! It’s a super popular steak casual dining spot in America. Steak is the star, but the bread that came out first was mind-blowingly delicious. Whoa, this is insane. It was so good I got it to go
Another marveled at unordered chips and salsa.
これは頼んでないけど最初からあった
こういうのは有料?
日本で言うお通し的な? pic.twitter.com/7TVZKpRth6— かもめTV (@kamome_tv) June 12, 2026
Translation: I didn’t order this, but it was here from the start. Is stuff like this paid? Like the otoshi you get in Japan?
Elsewhere, Japanese supporters have been spotted riding mechanical bulls, wandering Walmart, and generally approaching every aspect of Texan culture with the same earnest, slightly anthropological fascination that has made so much of this World Cup content so watchable.
A Fox News crew caught a group of Japanese supporters in North Texas and asked for their impressions of the Lone Star State. Verdict: “Texas is good, everything is big.”
“TEXAS IS GOOD EVERYTHING IS BIG” pic.twitter.com/i6Ry8B1Gjd
— FOX 4 NEWS (@FOX4) June 14, 2026
The most charming moments, though, have come from the reverse-direction cultural exchange. In a Texas sports bar, Japanese fans taught locals the word oishii. Dutch fans hoisted a Japanese supporter clutching a Pikachu plushie above a sea of orange jerseys. A Syrian-American comedian went viral for walking a group of Japanese visitors through their first In-N-Out order (double double, animal style).
The World Cup is usually narrated through competition, national identity, the pursuit of a trophy — a zero-sum frame. What’s happening here is the opposite: For one algorithmically blessed stretch, the internet’s attention has settled not on who wins, but on people finding each other endlessly fascinating.
And yes, Japanese supporters are still cleaning up the stadiums after matches. They brought the trash bags. They always do. The difference is that this year, they have also become the unlikely protagonists of the tournament’s most beloved side story.
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Updated On June 16, 2026