If it weren't for our children crying for two hours at the hotel entrance. I also don't want to cut people's money and give bad reviews. If you think about it carefully, more tourists should learn my lesson. Ctrip should be responsible or have system loopholes for bringing in such profiteers.
The biggest problem is that it wants to engage in automatic check-in in unmanned hotels, but it has not done a good job in advance. I couldn’t get in at the hotel entrance at 9:30 in the evening. I thought I had made a mistake. I was stupid for half an hour. After confirming that this was the hotel I booked, I called the merchant. The Ctrip introduction said that she could speak multiple languages. Finally, I urgently asked a friend in Tokyo to call for a long time, and finally got through the phone again. I sneaked into the 2-square-meter front desk with someone else’s access control. There was a pad. I operated it in foreign languages alone for a long time, and finally got a door opening code at 23:30 in the middle of the night. The child has fainted from crying, and the room is also very poor, with a lot of dust on the upper and lower bunks. There is video to prove it.
Shinjuku Garden Hotel has nothing to do with the garden or the hotel. I rented a residential house and transformed it into seven small rooms. I dared to call it that. I was charged close to 4,500 RMB for two nights. After staying for 8 hours and waking up, the children could no longer stand the dirty room. I left decisively and went to the nearby four-star hotel Edmond. The price is cheaper than Shinjuku Garden Hotel. It feels like the difference between heaven and hell.
After I return to China, I will complain to Ctrip in China, and at the same time, I will also see how the laws of Japan are stipulated. Why such a situation can also be called a hotel.
Original TextTranslation provided by Google