Japanese School Club

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Japanese schools' extra-curricular activities are centered on "club activities" organized by the students themselves. Each club will generally be assigned its own room or other facilities, will have an advisor (who doesn't always appear on screen), and will have a powerful president (kaicho) who'll be a significant character of some sort. For series that revolve around a specific club, the club's president frequently replaces the Student Council president in importance.

The three most commonly portrayed clubs are the student council, the school newspaper, and the Kendo team. For the student council, see Absurdly Powerful Student Council and Student Council President. For the newspaper, see School Newspaper Newshound. For the Kendo team, see Kendo Team Captain.

It's rare for a student to be a member of more than one club—club activities are generally too time-consuming to allow for it, and characters who do are generally the driven overachiever. The Ordinary High School Student who isn't a member of any club is said to be a member of the "Go Home Club". (Usagi does this in Sailor Moon when she gets to High School, as does Watanuki from ×××HOLiC. Kagura from Azumanga Daioh accuses the rest of the girls of this.) If there's a female character member of an all-male sports club, such as the baseball or soccer clubs, she's portrayed as the Cute Sports Club Manager. Characters who are a member of more than one club or who are extremely rapid in recruitment and enthusiasm are usually an Extracurricular Enthusiast.

Some schools require clubs to have a minimum number of members. A common theme is, therefore, the Club Stub which will do anything to get more members to prevent getting disbanded. And with anything we mean anything from The Power of Friendship to brutal force.

This is the lowest-ranking authority trope. For the next step up, see Absurdly Powerful Student Council and Landlord.

Examples of Japanese School Club include:

Anime and Manga

  • All of the teams in The Prince of Tennis are actually clubs, and their captains are basically the club president.
  • Minako's volleyball team in Sailor Moon.
    • In Sailor Stars, Minako joins Juuban's volley team. Meanwhile Seiya is in the American football team, Ami is in the computer club, and Makoto gets offers from several sports clubs (though she wants to go to the cooking club). One-time character Sonoko is the captain of the girls's softball team, too.
  • Miki's tennis team in Marmalade Boy.
    • Not only Miki's. Ginta is a member of the boys's tennis club, and his cousin Tsutomu is also a member of his school's own. Naturally this seeps in their rivalry, and Hilarity Ensues. Meanwhile, Meiko is a member of the literature club and Satoshi's classmate Furutachi is the leader of the broadcasting club.
    • Arimi is a membress of the track team in her and Tsutomu's school.
  • The amefuto (American-style football) team in Eyeshield 21.
  • The Magic User's Club in Magic User's Club.
  • The school chorus in Please Save My Earth. (Also, the "moon club.")
  • The Auto Club (and dozens of others) in Ah! My Goddess.
  • The Masculine Competition Society (and the "Megu Group" and the "Society to Protect Megumi") in Tenshi na Konamaiki.
  • The Society for the Study of the Modern Visual Culture in Genshiken. In a subversion, the original Club President is a seemingly powerless nonentity who barely attends. Mysteriously, he seems nearly omniscient at times; it's implied that this is because he has hidden cameras throughout the school for his nebulous research project. He never confirms or denies this, but just hinting at it is enough to blackmail Saki into joining the club.
    • At one point, the president of the student council decides to cancel all non-active clubs which, beside Genshiken, include some ridiculous clubs like "plant watering club", "bucket droppers club" or "kneaders club".
  • The Haruhi Suzumiya Brigade to Bring More Excitement to the World, or the "S.O.S. Brigade", in Suzumiya Haruhiis a deconstruction of the trope as it is not an official school club—no advisor, no funds, and they meet in the literature club's room (The sole member of the literature club doesn't mind). The reason for the club's conception is because Haruhi cannot find a club that suits her interests (mainly the supernatural). Later on, they become much more "relevant" to the school by offering counseling and investigation services for troubled students (most of which are set up by Itsuki to keep Haruhi preoccupied.)
    • Not to mention the S.O.S. Brigade's wannabe rivals, the Computer Club, and their histrionic president.
  • The go club in Hikaru no Go.
  • And, of course, the Ouran High School Host Club.
    • And don't forget the Black Magic Club.
    • The School Newspaper Club also makes an appearance
  • In Keroro Gunsou, Fuyuki was the president and only member of Kissho Academy's Occult Club until Momoka joined. This was lampshaded in an episode where the school was going to disband the club unless they could turn up something interesting to present to the school.
  • All members of the "Go Home Club" in Kare Kano are forcibly conscripted to participate in a play for the school culture festival.
  • Sakura's cheerleading squad in Cardcaptor Sakura. Meanwhile, her best friend Tomoyo is a member of the school chorus and at least two episodes are about her having trouble while either practising her songs or getting ready for singing competitions.
    • An episode of the anime has Sakura hanging around a girl from the track club, Rei, who has inadvertently gained the possession of a Clow Card.
  • Nayuki's track team in Kanon.
  • Tamami's Occult Club in Mahoraba.
  • Hitohira focuses on two rival clubs, the Drama Club and the Drama Research Society. As in Genshiken, it seems schools are uncomfortable with overlap, and the two must compete to stay official.
  • The calligraphy club in Kamichu!. The club holds its activities on the school roof, because it has only one member and thus doesn't rate a club room.
    • Zegapain also has an example of the one-member school club, in this case, the swimming club.
  • Pretty Cure never forgets about clubs.
    • Futari wa Pretty Cure had Nagisa and Honoka as the stars of the lacrosse team and science club respectively, and in Max Heart they were both promoted to leadership of the clubs. Members of both clubs were recurring characters, and Nagisa's teammates Rina and Shiho were regulars.
      • Additionally, Honoka was technically a member of several other clubs as well, although she was rarely able to attend meetings because of time constraints.
    • In Futari wa Pretty Cure Splash Star, Saki is the softball team's pitcher, and Mai eventually joins the art club after dithering about it for a while.
    • Yes! Pretty Cure 5 had episodes focusing on Rin and Karen which showed off an assortment of the school's clubs. Rin is as a founding member of the futsol team, and Komachi is a member of the library committee. Find that combination in another anime. Also deserving of special mention is Nozomi, who joined a number of different clubs and brought disaster upon all of them—Rin won't shut up about how she was kicked out of the drama club for a combination of massive incompetence and mass destruction.
    • All the main heroines in Heartcatch Pretty Cure are members of the fashion club (with Erika as the Club President), though they had some trouble getting it started due to a lack of members. In addition, Tsubomi is also a member of the gardening club, and then there's the Student Council President...
  • Clannad has Nagisa working to reform the school's drama club, despite having no members and being oppressed by the student council.
    • They're not really being oppressed, it's just that the drama club barely have members, they have no advisor and are nearly as bad with organization and paperwork as Afterschool Tea Time and as such the student council has to consider it a non-entity. When the drama club works out the issues (mainly by haring an advisor with an instrument club), they encounter no more external problems.
    • The second season also shows us the school's Occult Studies club, which has two members. Considering that the school has a four-member-minimum rule, the supposition is that the Occult Studies Club has two more members on the roll who never attend meetings; the colloquialism for such people translates as "ghost members".
  • In Gakuen Heaven nearly every character is a member of a different club. The main character is forced to visit every club so he can choose one to join.
  • In Higurashi no Naku Koro ni, Mion Sonozaki is the Class/Club President. The school is so tiny that she can get away with being both.
  • Mayura from Mythical Detective Loki Ragnarok has a Mystery Club.
  • Karin Sasamori from To Heart 2, also has a Mystery Club except that what she means by Mystery Club is similar to the SOS Brigade.
  • The Light Music Club from K-On!.[1] Yui was noted by Nodoka as having engaged in no after school group at all until high school, and when she did join the titular group, Nodoka initially assumed it was as a manager.
    • In the beginning of the second season, the girls visit other clubs at the school in order to get ideas on how to attract new members. This includes the Judo Club, Go Club, Tea Ceremony Club, and Occult Club.
  • The Mahjong club in Saki
  • The Astronomy Club in Sora no Manimani.
  • The Literature Club in Crescendo, with Kaho as the club president.
  • The Movie Study Club in Hayate the Combat Butler, aka "YourTube". They don't actually study movies, instead filming funny short films featuring students and staff. This being a Gag Series, and its three main members Those Three Girls, they get plenty of material.
  • The Art Club in Sketchbook.
  • Bludgeoning Angel Dokuro-chan: Dokuro-chan forms a student club called the "wood glue club". In this club, you watch white wood glue dry and turn transparent. She wants to make it to the nationals. It's implied that she physically tortured a teacher to approve the club—the approval form is signed in blood and wet with tears.
  • Eiken is named after the club the protagonists are part of, which is essentially The Club That Doesn't Do Anything.
  • The Yamayurikai in Marimite probably falls under the Absurdly Powerful Student Council it's notable that several characters do double duty with other clubs. Rei is the Kendo Team Captain and Yoshino joins the kendo club in her second year. Touko is also a member of the Drama Club and while not formally a member of the Yamayurikai at the time, her agreeing to help them with their play at the School Festival is a source of some conflict. The Photography Club also gets some coverage courtesy of Yumi's friend Tsutako.
  • Takeuchi in Canvas 2 finds it very difficult to get Hiroki to call her anything but club president.
  • The Paranormal Investigation Club in Tasogare Otome x Amnesia. It has no faculty advisor, it meets in an abandoned storeroom, and its founder and president is a ghost who's trying to find out how she died.
  • The Curry Club in Ame Nochi Hare.
  • The Modern Society Studies Club in 11eyes, founded by the already kind of crazy Yukiko. It makes a convenient cover for the club's activities in the Red Night.
  • The Digidestined of Digimon Adventure 02 have referred to their group as the "Computer Club". It's basically a cover for their afterschool trips to the Digital World, using one of the school computers to get there. An early episode shows that there is a teacher who acts as the club's advisor - but he doesn't know the first thing about using computers and is a nonentity for the rest of the series. (His story purpose was to send Taichi to Not Important to This Episode Camp by forcing him to run interference.)
    • Several Digidestined have their own club activities. Daisuke, Ken, Taichi and Sora are in their schools's soccer clubs, though Sora later switches to the tennis club.
  • In Kimagure Orange Road, Yusaku is a member of the school's karate club.
  • In Vision of Escaflowne, female lead Hitomi Kanzaki is a member of the track team and has a crush on the star of the club, Susumu Amano.
  • In GA Geijutsuka Art Design Class the art club form an extra set of protagonists beside of the main five.
  • In W Juliet the main characters Ito and Makoto meets when the later is joining the Drama Club. The club and it's members often play a role (no pun intended) in the serie afterwards.
  • Yubisaki Milk Tea have a small collection with several friends of the main character, Yoshinori Ikeda, in different clubs in high school. Wataru is in the boys soccer club, Nogi is the captain of the girls basketball team and Kodama is in the art club. Meanwhile Hidari Morii join a newfound girls soccer team on her middle school. Yoshinori himself played soccer in middle school but dropped it when he got into crossdressing.

Nogi: Which club are you in?
Yuki (Yoshinori): The Go Home Club.
Nogi: Ha. The Go Home Club...! The worst kind of student... One who isn't in any club.

  • Chu-Bra center about the middle school girl Nayu Hajama who create an underwear club since she is a serious fan of all undergarment. Needless to say that many people outside the club have some (false) perverted thoughs about it...
  • Yuru-Yuri starts with three, later four girls who form their own amusement club in the room of the disbanded tea ceremony club.
  • Yuritetsu is about a railway club - consisting of four high school girls.
  • Bakuon!! is all about the members of the biking (motorcycle) club at Okanoue Girls' School. In episode 9, when the new first-years arrive, there is a veritable scrum of clubs trying to recruit new members, and not always making it clear what they're about:

Kendo (?) club member: Want to try whacking people with a stick?
Judo (?) club member: Care to try throwing people?

  • Kokoro Connect is set in a school literature club, but is not about the club - instead, it's about the club members and their personal ordeals.

Live-Action TV

  • The Kamen Rider Club is the unofficial version in Kamen Rider Fourze. That is, until they get busted by one of the teachers midseason, who proclaims that unauthorized clubs are not allowed - so he'll be their advisor.


Video Games

  • In any Dating Sim located in a school, more than one possible love interest will be a member of a club. To have a bigger chance to get the girl/boy you're intrested in, you can try joining the club they belong to or dropping by when they're reunited, to meet up with them more frequently.
    • I.e.: Tokimeki Memorial 1 has: Saki Nijino (baseball or soccer club's Cute Sports Club Manager), Nozomi Kiyokawa (swimming team), Ayako Katagiri (art club), Mio Kisaragi (drama club), Shiori Fujisaki (school orchestra), Yumi Saotome (basketball club), Miharu Tatebayashi (reading club), Yuina Himoo (science club) and Yukari Koshiki (tennis club).
  • In Persona 3, SEES is technically a school club with Chairman Ikutsuki as its advisor, but the fact never proves to have any particular significance and several SEES members are members of official school clubs as well: Yukari is in the archery club, Akihiko is captain of the boxing team, and Mitsuru is Student Council President. The player character can join a number of official and unofficial clubs, including Student Council; these inevitably provide Social Links with the classmates involved.
  • The same is true in Persona 4, in which the Strength Social Link is held either by Kou (captain of the basketball club) or Daisuke (captain of the soccer club); meanwhile, Cute Sports Club Manager Ai is the Moon Social Link, and the Sun social link can either be Yumi (drama club) or Ayane (Music club).
  • Hourai Gakuen has plenty of these, ranging from normal sports clubs like tennis, baseball, karate, and the like, to weird ones like mad scientists' club and occult club. They function as the game's job system.
  • Player characters in Disgaea 3: Absence of Justice can join after-school clubs for various benefits, including special abilities. Characters can only Magichange successfully with members of the same club. The President of each club gains stat bonuses based on the power of his subordinates and can use their spells when adjacent to them in battle. The only club initially available, the Going Homers, confers no special benefits but has the largest default size.
  • Katawa Shoujo:
  • Yandere Simulator has many clubs the Villain Protagonist can join. Each club gives her some sort of advantage; for example, if she joins the Cooking Club, she can gain positive reputation fast and can carry a knife without raising suspicion, while the Gardening Club gives her easy access to the toolshed (where potential weapons can be obtained) and can carry a shovel without raising suspicion. The "catch" is that she can only join one at a time, and should the leader of a club be killed, arrested, or expelled, the club disbands, making any benefits they give unobtainable.
  1. which is derived from "keiongaku", which refers to light music