
A gadget to clip to your belt to help put your mind at ease.
With the coronavirus still a major health concern in Japan, the government has been asking people to limit the frequency with which they go shopping, ostensibly by buying more of what they need per trip. However, there’s only so much bulk you can buy in a country where the vast majority of urban/suburban communities do their shopping on foot.
If you’re walking to the store, you’re only going to be able to purchase as much as you can personally carry home, which means it won’t be long until you’re back again for more supplies, with each trip out involving touching doorknobs, cooler case handles, and all sorts of other surfaces that may or may not have been disinfected anytime recently.
And so our Japanese-language reporter Great Muromachi was looking for a way to keep his hands clean, which led him to this.
Produced by Tokyo-based company Piem, the Reassuring Door Opener is a hook you can use to open doors without having to directly touch them. “For you who loves cleanliness,” the package invitingly says, while also boasting that the product is “Made in Japan,” since who’d want to get stuck with one of those cheap, imported Reassuring Door Opener wannabes that are flooding the market?
The hook itself fits in the palm of your hand, and is just five millimeters (0.2 inches) thick. While you could just carry it around as is, the Reassuring Door Opener is really meant to be clipped to the end of the included reel, which connects on its other side to a carabiner.
With the Reassuring Door Opener attached to his belt loop, it was time for Great Muromachi to field test it. As he strolled to the convenience store to pick up some drinks, he was happy to find that the whole apparatus is lightweight enough that it caused him no distraction of awkwardness to walk with.
▼ Maybe not the most fashionable coronavirus countermeasure, but surely not the strangest-looking one either.
Once inside the store, he made his way to the refrigerated section, pulled on the Reassuring Door Opener’s cord…
…and, feeling fully reassured, used the hook to open the door.
It took a little more effort than grasping the handle directly would have, but the difference wasn’t so much as to cause him any distress or discomfort.
As he wore the item for the next several days, Great Muromachi discovered it has other uses too. For instance, if you’re using a vending machine or elevator, or for any other reason pressing a public-place button, it makes a handy prong.
▼ Personally, we think Piem is selling itself short by not calling it the “Reassuring Door Opener and Vending Machine or Elevator or Whatever Else Button Pusher,” but maybe their graphic designers couldn’t figure out how to fit all that on the package.
Great Muromachi purchased his Reassuring Door Opener for 1,980-yen (US$18.50) on Amazon, and if you’d like to be as reassured as him, orders can be made here.
Photos ©SoraNews24
● Want to hear about SoraNews24’s latest articles as soon as they’re published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!
[ Read in Japanese ]










Can this crazy LED robo mask make us better-looking? Let’s find out!【Experiment】
Kyoto’s THICKEST ramen is crazy and crazy-delicious【Taste test】
The Evangelion Tamagotchi is here, so let’s raise an Angel!【Photos】
Japan has only one airport named after a samurai, so let’s check out Kochi Ryoma【Photos】
Gourmet Japanese hamburger steak in three-year-shelf-life can: Genius or madness? Let’s find out!
Even at twice regular Daiso price, this handy item is still great for summer travel in Japan
Ghibli’s No Face continues to demonstrate his generous character growth by dispensing soy sauce
Tokyo’s Pokémon Cafe reopens this month with brand-new sweets and Pikachu show
Japanese convenience store shows us how to dress for the rainy season
Osaka is hosting a “hentai” event, but it’s probably not what you think
A Japanese toast sandwich remix: The toasted rice rice ball[SoraKitchen]
Uniqlo reveals third round of massive 100-year-anniversary manga T-shirts for Jump’s Shueisha
Japanese high school closes its cafeteria, replaces it with a 7-Eleven convenience store
Lawson opens a new mini supermarket, and the lucky bags can essentially stock your kitchen
Starbucks Japan unveils new Frappuccino showcasing “mottainai” culture
New official Ghibli anime food cookbook will teach you how to make Ponyo’s ramen and more
Kyoto public junior high school becomes first in Japan with a hoodie school uniform
What’s up with the Ghibli Park photo and video ban?
What’s it like to join Tokyo’s walking-and-talking-with-strangers club for a day?
Krispy Kreme releases a new Doughwich… at only one store in Japan
Tokyo’s life-size Gundam anime mecha statue will be removed this summer
Ichiraku Ramen-inspired ramen sets from Naruto anime pay homage to Naruto, Sasuke, and Sakura
Kanji ice cream becomes a sell-out hit in Japan
Japan now has gyoza doughnuts, and they taste like no other doughnut we’ve tried before
Japanese convenience store Lawson launches new “mini supermarket” chain, L Minimart
Japan’s real-world Pokémon hot spring’s first photos are here![Photos]
Japan’s human washing machines will go on sale to general public, demos to be held in Tokyo
Starbucks Japan releases new drinkware and goods for Valentine’s Day
We deeply regret going into this tunnel on our walk in the mountains of Japan
Starbucks Japan releases new sakura goods and drinkware for cherry blossom season 2026
Japan’s newest Shinkansen has no seats…or passengers [Video]
Major Japanese hotel chain says reservations via overseas booking sites may not be valid
Put sesame oil in your coffee? Japanese maker says it’s the best way to start your day【Taste test】
Japan reportedly adding Japanese language skill requirement to most common foreigner work visa
Japan’s 5.3 million beautiful Hitachi Nemophila flowers are now in full bloom[Photos]
Pokémon and Ikea Japan cross over into each other’s worlds with collaboration events
Japan now has drinkable gamer fuel gelatin, so let’s see if it can power us up【Taste test】
Our reporter can’t resist mystery of always-shut door being open on Tokyo subway station platform
You COULD eat a terrifying octopus egg in Japan, but SHOULD you? Let’s find out!【Taste test】
Will listening to Japan’s biggest earworm song for five hours drive you insane? Let’s find out!
What happens in the kitchen of a conveyor belt sushi restaurant? Let’s find out at Sushiro!
Can Japan’s one-person granite plate cooker take you to solo stone steak paradise? Let’s find out
Japan has a pizza for dogs, so of course we tried it
Is there demand for merch of our stylish reporter? Let’s find out with the Ikuna Acrylic Standee
Tokyo has a brand new Harry Potter shop with its own butterbeer bar – Let’s see what’s inside【Pics】
How many times has Golgo 13, manga’s greatest assassin, ever laughed? Let’s find out!
Is the absolute closest conveyor belt sushi to Akihabara Station any good? Let’s find out!
Tokyo has a cafe lounge that’s for negative people only
Let’s try all the melon bread types sold by Japanese convenience store Family Mart【Taste test】
Tokyo has an exclusive curry restaurant for members only to eat in, and we’ve tried its food
It’s the Nintendo Famicom’s 38th birthday, so let’s bust out the Famicom Disk System!
Instead of working from home, let’s find out what it’s like to work from a Japanese “beach house”