Damn reds! I swear I looked for the resize option! For some reason it only appears if you upload from your album and not the main page, stupid user-unfriendly nonsense. Imageshack never gave me that problem, other than the images dying fast and all...
Next time I'll def find the right option so that you don't have to mess around with these huge images! Just suffer this last time!
Oh well, driving back to the hotel...


Near the main train station is a huge TV which shows movies and other programs, always seemed to have a lot of people watching.

The hotel elevator uses flat-touch buttons. I think there were 47 floors or something which seems unnecessary, but the hotel was actually pretty damn busy while we were there. The majority of tourists were Chinese from what I saw.

In the basement lies Casino Pyongyang! It's apparently run by the government of Macau and DPRK citizens can't go in.

Loads of slots. I went into the main casino but the big games were majhong and some Chinese card game, neither of which I knew how to play. They also had a blackjack table but the minimum bets were 10 euro and it seems to be the style where you keep raising against the other players. I would have played if the bets were a few euro or so, but I'm not that great at blackjack and didn't want to waste money.


One of the hotel shops. They carried various things, from candy to shampoo. Lots of the stuff was imported. The purchasing system in the country is extremely backwards.

Here's a receipt. I tried so goddamn hard to take a clear picture but for some reason my camera refused to focus. I kept taking pics and the store staff started to look at me strange so I gave up.
Anyway they don't use computers or any machines for receipts. You go to the counter, choose what you want to buy, and they write down the item and price. You then bring the receipt to the front cashier, pay for your stuff, and they stamp the receipt. You then go back to the initial counter, give them the proof of purchase, and they'll give you what you bought. Takes forever.
Next up was exploring the Pyongyang subway system! Lots of these pictures came out bad for some reason.

Your typical station entrance.

Station lobby.

They use an IC card system, somewhat surprising.


This thing lets you press the button to the station you want to go to and it'll light up your route and any transfers you have to make. Not a bad idea, although it seems kind of unnecessary for a network with only two lines.

Station platform.

The trains were all quite packed, although this was a terminus station.





Inside the car.

Notice the graffiti on the glass!

Another station. Going in the subway was a lot of fun actually, you really saw how the city moved. Also funny to see random schoolgirls get off the platform and be absolutely shocked to see foreigners.



Back in the train! Only one station and it's already quite full.

Something I found interesting is that I saw some people playing games on their cell phones. No matter what the country, people need to kill time! Tried to get a pic of the guy but it was too dark and I wasn't about to use flash, the pic came out unusable.

Another station.

Yet another one.

We got off here.






Kiosk inside the station.

Random crap to buy.

Back outside. The outside of the stations really don't match the insides.


Public restrooms.




I guess there's no escape from overpriced tourist photo services.

Underpass.

Next was the subway museum!



The museum is less about the actual subway and more about Kim Ill Sung's influence on it. Everything that he used is on display, from chairs that he sat on to ashtrays and flashlights that he used. The majority of the rooms banned photography to preserve the objects or some shit.
Still, there were some cool things I could get pics of...



This was a huge 360-degree diorama room. Holy hell was it amazing, probably one of the most impressive things I've ever seen.
Next was dinner!


Streetcars all over the place. They also seem to run extremely frequently during rush hour, you can see the upcoming tram from the stop. The stops always had insane lines during rush hour.


So here's a story. One of the guides mentioned that there aren't many ethnic restaurants in Pyongyang, only Chinese and Italian. We were all interested in trying some DPRK pizza, and convinced to guides to change the dinner to the restaurant and get us reservations. We had to pay for everything out of our own pockets, but it's the kind of experience that you really can't pass up.

I was kind of expecting some generic ugly interior, needless to say I was pretty surprised.

The majority of the menu was normal pizza choices, I chose the strangest one possible which was this ham with french fries monster. To be honest, the pizza was a hell of a lot better than I expected. It wasn't gourmet or anything, but it was legit enough. The cheese was also really good.
It was night by the time we finished.


Here's something worth talking about. Karaoke is absolutely HUGE in the DPRK. Every restaurant seems to have a karaoke setup, and we heard the staff singing songs several times. Karaoke is also on TV constantly. There isn't enough programming to occupy 24-hours worth of TV space, so between normal shows and the news they just show karaoke. I kind of got used to DPRK music after awhile and became a fan of some songs. I bought a few CDs but didn't really know anything so just randomly bought some shit and most of them were these revolutionary songs which I'm not the biggest fan of. I kind of regret not getting suggestions for more poppy music.
Anyway, here's a song which was very, very popular. Almost guaranteed that it'd get sung if someone started up for a karaoke session.