• Location:  Tech Corridor 
  • Theme: Exhilarating competitive play meets sleek nightlife energy
  • Meaning: Gekitō means “fierce contest,” capturing the spirit of Japanese game shows—playful danger, strategic physicality, and the thrill of challenge—elevated into a sophisticated entertainment club.

Staff

Hosts & Hostesses

Hosts and hostesses are available for selection, including gender-fluid or non-binary individuals simply referred to as hosts. Their style draws from the world of Japanese game shows. They resemble the iconic “assistant models” seen presenting prizes or guiding contestants—beautiful, calm, and impeccably styled in elegant game-show–model inspired outfits: sleek bodysuits, structured jackets, metallic trims, polished photogenic presence, and poised smiles.

Once selected, a host offers the same kind of companionship as in the other clubs: conversation, attention, emotional connection, and intimate presence. Channeling hosts—capable of enhancing a guest’s physical acuity, sense of balance, or mental focus—are the most expensive.

Serving staff are not available for companionship. Security, cleaning, and technical operations are handled by independent contractors. “Break-ups” with hosts must be done formally before selecting a new one.

Description

Gekitō occupies a renovated 1970s broadcast center in Moscow’s Tech Corridor. The building once filmed Soviet variety shows; now, its brutalist concrete bones and glowing neon accents form the backdrop for a nightlife space built on competition, spectacle, and indulgence.

The color palette is bold and electric: cobalt blue, crimson red, electric yellow, stark white, and blackened steel. Lighting inside is dynamic and immersive—spotlight trails follow competitors across the floor, shifting light patterns dance along the walls, while soft ambient glows define more intimate conversation zones. Sound design is precise and energetic, driven by bright J-pop beats layered with rising synth chords and chime accents used sparingly to build tension or celebration. The atmosphere is alive, competitive yet sophisticated

Exterior

LED panels cycle through stylized game-show imagery—confetti bursts, falling lights, cartoonish countdowns. Bold yellow katakana spelling Gekitō pulses above the entrance. Mechanical gears frame the doorway, and motion-reactive floor tiles light up with every step. A suspended “timer wheel” slowly rotates overhead, its countdown perpetually resetting, adding a layer of anticipation before guests even walk inside.

Interior

Main Hall: The Arena

The heart of Gekitō is a sweeping, modular competition hall that combines two iconic formats.

1. The Warrior Course

An expansive obstacle arena inspired by Sasuke/Ninja Warrior:

  • precision jumps over glowing pods
  • shifting balance logs
  • rotating padded arms
  • ascending wall climbs
  • narrow-edge runs over illuminated water troughs
  • sudden fog bursts that obscure footing

The course can be completed solo or in heats where competitors race side-by-side. Guests can compete if they want to sign a waiver otherwise, it is contracted performers or athletes who offer the entertainment.

2. The Ring

A circular, elevated hand-to-hand combat platform reminiscent of Japanese gladiatorial competitions. It is not a blood sport—this is controlled, disciplined combat with referees and safety rules—but it is intense and theatrical. Fighters wear stylized protective gear with bright accents. 

Seating curves around both the Warrior Course and the Ring, giving the entire hall the feel of a mixed-media arena: kinetic, geometric, and luminously charged.

Studio B Bar

Styled after a hybrid of a retro control room and a neon café, the bar glows at the heart of Gekitō’s social scene. Its acrylic counter shifts in color with each drink poured, throwing soft light across liquor shelves sculpted into towering pachinko-track shapes. A capsule machine near the end dispenses the unpredictable “Gacha Shots,” adding a playful element to the experience. Competitors drift in to catch their breath between challenges, hosts slip beside their guests with polished ease, and spectators settle into the lively space to regroup before the next burst of action in the arena.

Commentary Deck

The Commentary Deck occupies the upper level, a wide mezzanine that circles the main arenas like an elevated broadcast ring. Private pods styled after sleek commentary booths line the perimeter, each equipped with replay screens and interactive LED panels that let guests revisit their performances or study the competitions below. The soundproofing creates pockets of calm where a guest can speak quietly with their chosen host, insulated from the noise and excitement of the arena. Subtle control panels are built into each booth, allowing visitors to trigger ambient light effects or playful audience reactions that ripple through the hall, adding to the atmosphere without disrupting the action.

Private Competition Rooms

Behind glossy sliding doors lie a series of small, immersive challenge rooms designed for guests who want a more private encounter with the club’s competitive spirit. These spaces are not sexual in nature, yet they offer a different kind of closeness—one built on teamwork, shared adrenaline, and the rush of facing something difficult together. Each room carries its own theme: the Neon Maze with its shifting walls and mirrored traps, the Puzzle Box filled with oversized tactile challenges, the Balance Chamber where suspended beams tilt under shifting lights, and the Silent Duel Room, a soft-matted arena meant for one-on-one friendly combat. Within these contained worlds, a guest and their chosen host move through challenges side by side, forging a quiet, thrilling connection through cooperation and rivalry alike.

Layout

Basement – Wrestler/competitor locker rooms, staff quarters, mechanical storage
Main Level – Multi-course arena (Warrior Course + Shōbushiai Ring), bar, stadium seating
Upper Levels – Commentary Deck, private competition rooms, elevated lounge seating

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