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<title>amebafansのブログ</title>
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<title>J1リーグで「38勝0分け0敗」を目指す38-0を遊んでみました</title>
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<![CDATA[ <p>最近、Jリーグを見ている人ならちょっと気になりそうなブラウザゲームを見つけました。<br><br>名前は「38-0」です。<br><br>最初は試合のスコアかなと思ったのですが、ここでいう38-0は「38勝0分け0敗」のことでした。<br><br>内容は、J1リーグの選手を選んでベストイレブンを作り、1シーズンを全勝で走り切れるか試す、ファンメイドのサッカーゲームです。もちろんJリーグ公式とは関係ない、非公式の遊びです。<br><br>少し触ってみると、単に有名な選手を並べればいいわけではなくて、GK、DF、MF、FWのバランスを考えるのがけっこう悩ましいです。<br><br>「この中盤ならボールは持てそう」<br>「でも前線の決定力が少し足りないかも」<br><br>そんな感じで、頭の中で試合を想像しながら選ぶところが意外と楽しかったです。<br><br>Jリーグを普段から見ている人ほど、クラブや選手の組み合わせでいろいろ考えられると思います。好きな選手を入れたい気持ちと、勝つために現実的な選択をしたい気持ちの間で迷う感じが、ベストイレブンを考える遊びに近いです。<br><br>ちなみに、遊んだのはこちらです。<br>https://wordlecup.today/ja/38-0/<br><br>J1リーグで38勝0分け0敗を目指す、という発想がシンプルでわかりやすいので、空き時間に少し触るにはちょうどいい感じでした。<br><br>サッカーのベストイレブンを考えるのが好きな人や、Jリーグの選手を見ながら「あの選手とこの選手を組ませたらどうなるかな」と考えるのが好きな人なら、けっこう楽しめると思います。</p>
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<link>https://ameblo.jp/amebafans/entry-12971272792.html</link>
<pubDate>Tue, 30 Jun 2026 16:04:43 +0900</pubDate>
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<title>The Anger Behind the “Goose Leg Auntie” Story</title>
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<![CDATA[ <h1>&nbsp;</h1><p>I still remember how the “Goose Leg Auntie” story first spread online. At the beginning, it felt like one of those warm, ordinary stories people like to believe in: a hardworking street vendor, simple food, loyal customers, and a little bit of grassroots fame.</p><p>But the more I think about it, the angrier I become.</p><p>What makes people angry is not just the food itself. It is the feeling of being fooled. People were not only buying a goose leg. They were buying a story. They were buying trust, nostalgia, and the belief that an ordinary person could win respect through honest work.</p><p>That is why the disappointment hurts.</p><p>In today’s internet, a simple street food story can quickly become a symbol. People share it, defend it, queue for it, and even turn it into a kind of emotional support. But once the public discovers that the product may not be what they believed it was, the whole thing collapses. The problem is not only about taste or price. It is about honesty.</p><p>Food should be one of the most basic forms of trust. When someone sells food, customers trust the seller with their money, their health, and sometimes even their memories. If that trust is used as a marketing tool, people have every reason to be angry.</p><p>This is also why I have been thinking more about how fragile online reputation can be. Fame can rise overnight, but if it is not supported by truth, quality, and responsibility, it can disappear just as fast.</p><p>The “Goose Leg Auntie” incident is not only a food story. It is a lesson about the internet, business, and public trust. We should support small vendors and ordinary workers, but support should never mean blindly accepting everything. Sympathy should not become a shield for dishonesty.</p><p>Real craftsmanship deserves respect. Real products deserve attention. Real trust deserves protection.</p><p>That is also why I believe people should pay more attention to honest, practical, and well-made products in daily life. For example, I recently came across <a href="https://etui.life/">etui.life</a>, a site that focuses on simple lifestyle and practical everyday-use ideas. In a time when too many stories are packaged for attention, I find myself more interested in things that are straightforward, useful, and not overhyped.</p><p>The internet does not need more fake legends.</p><p>It needs more honesty.</p>
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<link>https://ameblo.jp/amebafans/entry-12970065621.html</link>
<pubDate>Thu, 18 Jun 2026 17:18:48 +0900</pubDate>
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<title>Looking for a Short-Term Soccer Program in Japan</title>
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<![CDATA[ <p>Hi everyone,<br><br>I am from China, and I have an 8-year-old son who has recently become interested in soccer. He is still a beginner. We are not looking for a professional academy or anything too serious. I just hope he can spend part of his summer vacation learning soccer in a good environment, meeting other kids, and enjoying the sport.<br><br>We are thinking about going to Japan during the summer vacation, probably sometime between July and August. Ideally, I would like to find a short-term soccer school, club program, or summer camp for about one to two weeks.<br><br>There are a few things I am trying to figure out.<br>&nbsp;</p><p>we do&nbsp;not speak Japanese,So I wonder if there are any soccer clubs or kids’ soccer schools in Japan that are friendly to foreign children, especially beginners.<br><br>I am also thinking about the city. Tokyo and Osaka are convenient, but I have heard that July and August can be very hot. Since my son is only 8, I would prefer a place that is not too hot, if possible.<br><br>Some places I am curious about are Hokkaido, Nagano, Sendai, or maybe Karuizawa. I am not sure whether these places have good short-term soccer programs for children, but they seem cooler and maybe more comfortable for summer training.<br><br>What I am looking for:<br><br>- A soccer program suitable for an 8-year-old beginner<br>- Short-term participation, around 1 to 2 weeks<br>- Friendly to foreign children who do not speak Japanese<br>- A city or area where accommodation is not too expensive<br>- Easy access to food and daily life<br>- Not too hot in July or August<br>- Safe and convenient for a parent and child to stay together<br><br>If anyone has experience with kids’ soccer schools, summer camps, or local clubs in Japan, I would really appreciate your advice.<br><br>Are there any cities, clubs, or programs you would recommend?<br><br>Thank you.</p>
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<link>https://ameblo.jp/amebafans/entry-12969295461.html</link>
<pubDate>Thu, 11 Jun 2026 11:42:08 +0900</pubDate>
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<title>I Picked the Keyword for My TikTok Comment Gener</title>
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<![CDATA[ <p>When I first picked the keyword “TikTok comment generator,” I thought the logic was pretty clear.<br><br>I was using Semrush and searching around the word “generator,” because I noticed many small tool websites are built this way. People search for different types of generators when they want something quick: captions, names, comments, bios, usernames, and so on.<br><br>After checking search volume and keyword difficulty, “TikTok comment generator” looked like a keyword worth trying. It was specific, the intent was clear, and it did not look impossible compared with broader keywords.<br><br>So I built this page:<br>https://commentgenerator.pro/tiktok-comment-generator/<br><br>But the honest part is: it still has not brought much traffic.<br><br>That has been frustrating. Sometimes I look at the page and think, “I did the keyword research, I built the tool, I wrote the content, so why is nothing happening?” SEO feels simple when you look at keyword tools, but very slow when you are actually waiting for Google to care.<br><br>Some days it makes me not want to work at all. I open my laptop planning to improve the page or build backlinks, and then I end up watching short videos instead. It is not because I do not care. It is because the gap between effort and result feels too big sometimes.<br><br>Still, I think this is part of building small websites. Keyword research is only the beginning. A page needs time, better examples, internal links, backlinks, and probably many small improvements before it has a chance to rank.<br><br>So for now, I am treating this page as a long-term experiment. Maybe the traffic will come later, maybe it will not. But I want to keep recording the process honestly, including the boring and discouraging parts.</p>
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<link>https://ameblo.jp/amebafans/entry-12969294725.html</link>
<pubDate>Thu, 11 Jun 2026 11:32:27 +0900</pubDate>
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