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  • majority of our videos are of the perpective of people living in Korea

  • but we know that a lot of the people that we talked to out on the street whenever we

  • meet them

  • wined up saying that they are just visiting Korea.

  • So today we're gonna give you our best tips and tricks if you are gonna visit Korea

  • and by visit you mean vacation? You keep using this word visit, like as if you are going to your aunt's house. [S]yeah ...[M] "I am going to visit"

  • All right Hot Tip number 1: so you've just arrived at Inchon Airport and you are all ready to go

  • to your hotel

  • you've got your google map you've got the address in your phone and then you realize

  • that Google Map does not work in Korea.

  • Apple maps isn't really working in Korea either. [M]Please, please, please come

  • prepared with the address of your hotel written in Korean

  • because the taxi drivers if you're taking them, anywhere, they will not know where you're

  • going.

  • There are so many tiny hotels and hostels

  • all around Korea. So if you just mention the name of it to your taxi driver, they

  • probably won't know, unless you are at a really swanky place. And it's a lot safer to have

  • the address of your hotel than the move of it. So tip #2:

  • For us whenever we travel to other countries we tend to get little wifi eggs

  • that we could stay connected to the Internet. In Korea you

  • you can get those but you don't need it. Because there are so many open wifi

  • spots everywhere. [M]Everywhere.

  • No passwords on them. As opposed to if you go to Japan, whenever we go to

  • Japan, I can never find any open free wifi anywhere and I need an egg.

  • You must get an egg if you go to Japan. [S]Yes. [M]You can easily pick them up by like

  • ordering them online at the airports.

  • -Korea -really it's a waste of money for you. [S]Right. [M]You will be

  • wired up everywhere you go. So don't worry about it. [S]If you're in a city that is. If you're

  • out in the sticks and you might not find that many wifi hotspots. But

  • in Seoul I think you gonna be alright. But who is gonna come to Korea and go to the countryside?

  • [M+S] eeeeeh..... Tip # 3: Get this App!

  • The Jihachul subway app. It is very very useful for you when youy are in Korea, more than likely

  • you gonna be using the subway because the subway system here's almost perfect.

  • It's like webbed-out to

  • every region guys.

  • And this is the best subway app that I have ever seen

  • in any country. If you wined up clicking where you are and where you wanna go

  • it'll

  • tell you exactly how to get there, how long it's gonna take you to get there,

  • what time the subway is gonna come, [M]How much it gonna cost, [S]How much it gonna cost,

  • [M]depending on the route you wanna take [S]and here's what's great about it: if you have

  • any transfer points in between

  • it'll tell you the transfer points and it will even tell you

  • what subway cart to be on and what door, so you could be closer to the exit

  • when you transfer.

  • It's brilliant. Ultra useful better than anything I've ever seen in anywhere else in the world.

  • Besides the subway app, which is super super helpful, there is also a really cool bus app,

  • which might be for more adventurous people that wanna get on the bus. But the buses

  • and subways are connected with the theme card. So when you come here, if you decide to

  • get the T money passcard,

  • which I recommend, because it's easy to use, you can beep on the bus,

  • beep on the subway,

  • you beep off the bus, you beep off the subway and it takes you all over Korea cheaply.

  • And the app for the bus actually shows you when it's showing up, what time, where you can catch it from,

  • and when you use the subway map, you can press like,

  • the search nearby and it'll show you all the places that are nearby for you to get on the subway or to catch the bus.

  • Tip # 4: A lot of people are now traveling with many more

  • electronics than before and I'm not sure if you've had this experience

  • if you go to a hotel and you try to plug in your devices you might have five divices

  • but only two outlets,

  • and you are screwed! [M] And the rest of them are like behind the bed, and you're like: why would you put that there.

  • So then you go on this rotation; and you got like plugin to over here and you got a plugin one over there,

  • in the bathroom. [M]and you

  • ..what percentage is your phone at, mine is at 32. [S] OK I got a solution for you, [M] mine is at 25.

  • This thing right here, we wined up getting it.

  • It's a 5 USB device charger. Right here

  • its got a back thingy, and usually comes the cable. These are usually universal 100 and 240 watts

  • If you have an adapter for it won't blow out your devices. It could charge 5

  • devices

  • at once, through 1 wall outlet. This is great, I bring this with me

  • everywhere. It makes things a lot easier. You will like it. Hey,

  • get one of these, travel with them, they're great. Tip No. 5:

  • Time to go over

  • money stuff, because we've had a lot of visitors come to visit us, and we've seen

  • the stress people went through. [S]yes. Number one: a lot of people want to wait until they arrive

  • at the airport to convert money when they are in Korea.

  • It is actually better for you to convert money back home, because the airport will usually rip you off

  • with the

  • worst possible ... what it is called? transfer.. [S] Yeah, transfer rates, currency rates,

  • fees, everything. I never transfer money at the airport unless

  • crushingly desperate. But do that ahead of time. It'll be easier for you.

  • Tip No.2: please make sure, if you're gonna use credit cards in Korea that you call your

  • credit card company

  • before you leave for Korea, to let them know that you are traveling. [S] It seems so

  • simple and a lot of people forget about it and then they come here and try to buy something

  • with a credit card

  • and it gets declined. Just give them a call it'll take you only like three

  • hours of being on hold.

  • So say you are not a credit card person and you took out all the cash, and already spent it all,

  • and now you need more cash while in Korea. This is gonna be a little bit

  • tougher

  • Not every ATM machine in Korea will accept your foreign crads.

  • So you've got to make sure that you find the ones that except it. They usually have a little

  • symbol on the back of your card, and if it matches the symbol on the ATM,

  • you could use it.

  • If you don't wanna go looking for every symbol, go to a Citi Bank machine.

  • [M] C I T I [S] C I T I bank.

  • Those usually work and they will be able to accept your card, and give you

  • the cash

  • that you need. [M] Yes. However it's not always easy

  • to find them. I remember when my sister and her husband came down, [S]yeah. We like

  • went all over the city trying to find a stupid freaking Citi bank. And we ended up finding one at

  • like a random

  • 7/11 It looked like one of those little tiny ATMs that are set up by the

  • mafia, but it was a real

  • ATM. Also, important for you to know is, if you do wined up

  • using your bank card in Korea, make sure you speak with your bank beforehand,

  • and know if your bank card is usable overseas because some bank cards cannot

  • be used overseas. I remember with our korean bank account

  • we have to ask them specifically to give us a card, that we could use in Japan, in Canada and

  • all that. So make sure you ask your bank if your card is capable. [M]But one really good

  • thing about Korea is that majority of places do accept like credit cards and

  • debit cards.

  • So unless you are going to like a small street food stand or like you try to

  • haggle for clothing

  • you can pretty much use credit card everywhere, like coffee shops will

  • accept it for like a two dollar purchase. There's no like

  • extra charge or anything. [S]Convenience stores and everything you can use your credit cards. [M]However, when you

  • go to Japan

  • [S]yeah. [M]You are screwed if you do not have cash on you. [S]Even for major franchizes. Like you go to a Coco Curry

  • which they have them almost everywhere. They only accept cash, which really was

  • frustrating for us because we didn't plan this one in advance. I wish I would

  • have seen this beforehand. [M]Yep. Korea is very wired up when it comes to

  • credit cards. [S]So we're making this seem all very doom and gloom, we're just trying to prepare

  • you. But more than likely you gonna have no problems with shopping in Korea. [M]Speaking of

  • shopping.

  • Tip no. 6: our last tip had like 18....[S]It had

  • subtips. [M]subtips if you will. When it comes to shopping a lot of people hit the major

  • touristy areas, like Myong-dong, because the clothing there is pretty cheap.

  • If you go to a department store in Korea, where looking at like name-brand

  • places, you know you can try on the clothing, you can use your credit card to purchase it,

  • but you might find that Myong-dong will give you a better deal.

  • However that usually means cash purchases and they won't let you try on

  • the clothing.

  • [S]yes. We run into a lot of people who say things like: oh, because I am a torusit

  • they won't let us try it on. [S]They don't like

  • foreigners, and what not. That's not the case. It's not anything specifically

  • against

  • you or your race. [M]No, it's actually just like it's such a cheap kind of like

  • quick exchange of goods place.

  • If you try on the clothing, first of all people get make-up smuged all over it.

  • So they don't want you to try it on, but a lot of places don't have the language to

  • express it. So they'll just do things like

  • no, or like you can't. So people feel like it's really rude when

  • in reality it applies to everybody living in Korea. So cheap clothing is

  • great but might be inconvenient so I would say where some kinda clothing that

  • can help you

  • push it up against your body to try to eyeball it, and be aware of free size.

  • The F, which means one size fits all which one size is not

  • fit all. [S]Free size usually just means that I'm

  • the designer, I made 1 size and if you don't fit it, then you're free to f*ck off.

  • [M]That's what it feels like. [S]yeah, that's what it means.

  • and unfortunately free size is you usually what you find in areas like Hongdae and Myong-dong.

  • So it's fashionable, it"s cheap, but it probably won't fit you.

  • [M]~despair~[S]Hey, hey, there there,

  • there there. I know you don't fit things here. Hey, I don't fit things here, I've totally

  • given up on that. [M]But I am a girl. [S] How about a double XL from the Nike store recently,

  • and it's like, my sweater thing, it's tight at a double XL.

  • If I bought a double XL in the US I can make a tent out of it.

  • That's what happened when Lee brought back pants for us. [S]Yeah, Lee brought us some double XL pants

  • and

  • they cover my nipples. [M]They are pajama pants. [S] The pajama pants go up to..and I just put them in

  • and...

  • Each of us could.. you could do the left leg, I could do the right leg, and we could create like a uni in the blanket.

  • It's like a snuggie blanket.

  • XL in Korea means more like a medium

  • in the US. [M]And tip no. 7 is when you leave Korea.

  • So when you leave from Incheon Airport, before you go through security, there is a lot

  • of like bakeries, there is even like convenience stores where you can buy

  • snacks and stuff like that But once you get through the other side of security,

  • [S]There is barely anything to eat it. [M]Yeah, it's mostly like namebrand shoppings. So if you are into buying

  • designer stuff, then enjoy eating your designer out of a bag but other than that

  • there is

  • pretty much one food court, which is painfully overpriced,

  • and not very... it's like 11 or 12 $ for a simple roll of bibimpap. [S]It's a huge rip-off

  • There's a Starbucks,

  • where you're like okay and then there's some really shoddy

  • food stands. So what I recommended is before you go through security

  • get yourself like a freshly made sandwich or a salad or get some like

  • snacks from the convenience store anything that's not liquid beacuse obviously it won't make it through

  • security.

  • And then you'll have something on the other side and you will thank us because we've been through

  • that airport so many many times.

  • Seriously pick up some good food on the other side of security before you go

  • through. So that's it for our 7 tips and tricks

  • if you plan on visiting Korea, we're gonna talk about a few more in a blog post. So make sure

  • to click on a link here,

  • if you wanna be fully prepared for your visit to this country. I feel like the blogpost

  • contains the most important vital parts of information. [S] I know. [M]So my question for you guys today is this:

  • Think outside the box. Imagine someone is coming to visit your country. They're

  • arriving at your

  • airport and they're trying to get to your city and get a hotel, do touristy things. What

  • is one or two pieces of advice

  • you would want to give them that they do not know from like the normal touristy

  • travel guide.

  • Think about it as if you're advising us because we do a lot traveling. There is a good

  • chance that we might visit some of your country this year. [M]For our last TL;DR we

  • talked about bakeries in Korea and how

  • different the breads are than what we're used to back home how much we miss it.

  • And we're talking about how we miss the Canadian breads and what not. We had an

  • awesome comment specifically from Akichan, who is from Iran and she wined up saying

  • that they

  • hate US bread which is surprising to me because I

  • miss it, I love it. What is it that you hate so much about it?[M]But you know what

  • is interesting is what I was reading through

  • the comment section a lot of people said things like when they went overseas to

  • North America, the bread was so soft,

  • [S]yes. [M]Like the sliced-style, it is squishy. They said there was like no texture.

  • As opposed to like Scandinavian bread, that's really really dense. [M]Yeah.

  • So people are used to like a grainy taste and they have a North American bread

  • and they are like what did this crap.

  • It's so interesting, right? Like we miss bread, you guys miss bread, people miss bread.

  • We miss it for different reasons. [M]yeah. [S]Also we had a really

  • interesting comment from

  • xDareDBx who we see in lots of our videos, thank you for commenting all the time.

  • We really appreciate it. [M]yeah, they left a really cool comment saying that in their

  • international business class

  • in Korea they learned that the person that found Paris Baguette [S]yes. was actually

  • found because McDonald needed people to make their bun and all

  • the A and B level bakers in Korea... [S]refused [M] were like,

  • no we are not gonna help you out. And then he was part of C level. [S]He

  • agreed to do it

  • and then afterwards used that knowledge to make Paris Baguette and

  • Paris Croissant and they became A MILLIONARE!

  • Who is laughing now A and B class bakers! You got nothing!

  • Even though I still don't like Paris Baguette and Paris Croissant's food. I can still respect that

  • this guy is totally

  • laughing at all the other people that snob McDonalds.

majority of our videos are of the perpective of people living in Korea

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