Okay, should this qualify as a “weird Japanese food” or an “international food styling fail”?*
The case for it being a weird Japanese food:
1) “I know, let’s make an expensive chocolate bar filled with the world’s most sickly-sweet, artificially-colored, carnival-adjascent, junk food we can find!” said nobody outside of Japan ever.
2) The words “strand” and “hair” should not even be in the same room with the word “chocolate.”
The case for it being an international food styling fail:
1) The brand designers obviously never had a troll collection as children, or they’d know that “angel” hair is not the image invoked by that package illustration.
2) The Japanese words on the front of the package are not (as one might assume) the local translation of the product description. It’s a disclaimer that the actual product may “differ” from what’s shown on the box.
Uh…no kidding?
And how did it taste? About as delicious as it looks. (¬_¬)
*The chocolate bars are apparently imported, but the packaging is all printed in Japanese (not just a sticker slapped over the ingredients list), which means it was made for the Japanese market and somebody made a bet that this unholy alliance would appeal to the locals.
Will this be your new favorite mystery too?

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Jonelle Patrick writes novels set in Japan, produces the monthly e-magazine Japanagram, and blogs at Only In Japan and The Tokyo Guide I Wish I’d Had



No thank you for the chocolate. Interesting but not surprising. ❣️🍵Sent from my iPhone
I have to admit, nothing much surprises me in Japan anymore, but I was surprised by this one! I actually walked past it, then backed up to see why a chocolate bar had troll hair, because it was so weird!
I’ll pass. Thanks for doing the research, though.