NEEDY GIRL OVERDOSE is getting a proper three-city Japan pop-up tour this summer, and the announcement is detailed enough to be useful right away. Instead of just confirming a tour exists, the release names each city, each venue, the exact date windows, and the shopping perks tied to spending thresholds.
That matters because this is the kind of event where travelers often need to know whether they are planning around a full exhibition, a merch table, or a short retail stop. Here, the answer is a compact merch-and-photo-spot event with free entry and city-by-city timing that is already set.
What The Announcement Actually Confirms
Official NEEDY GIRL OVERDOSE pop-up announcement confirms that the tour runs from August 8 to September 6, 2026 across Tokyo, Osaka, and Aichi, with new official goods and display elements built around fresh art by a stacked lineup of guest illustrators.
The release also says the event will not just be a shelf of products. It includes themed exhibition elements such as special photo spots and life-size panels, which helps explain why the organizers are treating it like a tour rather than a simple online goods launch.
The full Japanese announcement lists the currently announced details available so far.
Confirmed Details
- Entry: free.
- Tokyo stop: August 8 to August 16 at OPENBASE SHIBUYA in Shibuya, 11:00 to 20:00.
- Osaka stop: August 21 to August 30 at the Community Food Hall Osaka-Nihonbashi space, 11:00 to 20:00.
- Aichi stop: September 4 to September 6 at Canon Oosu 2B in Nagoya, 11:00 to 19:00.
- Purchase bonus at 5,000 yen: one instant-photo-style card.
- Purchase bonus at 10,000 yen: one original can badge.
- Weekday bonus: one random sticker for every additional 5,000 yen spent, while supplies last.
- Organizers say crowding may trigger entry restrictions or timed tickets.
That combination of free entry and tiered shopping perks tells you what kind of event this is. It is built for fans who want to browse new art and goods in person, take photos, and maybe treat the stop like a short destination in a larger Tokyo, Osaka, or Nagoya outing.
The release also warns that goods can sell out, venue rules can change, and some display features such as the special photo spot are only confirmed for certain locations.
What Has Not Been Announced Yet
Tokyo has the longest run, Osaka follows as the second stop, and Aichi closes the tour with the shortest schedule.
Item-by-item stock levels and any final crowd-control rules have not been published in full.
