Went out with some friends to Ginza Ibuki last night. They frequently go out for sushi in Taiwan and was looking for a nice place to try while they were here visiting Tokyo for a few days. A friend recommended this place to us and we looked online to see if it would be a good fit for us, since we had several kids in our party. In addition to the sushi bar itself, the place has many different private rooms. We called to make sure that kids would be “welcome” and they said at the counter no kids allowed, but in a provide room, no problem. So be made a reservation. You will need to have a Japanese speaker call since they do not speak English which is the norm for places in Tokyo. Funny thing is we arrived the place, using google map’s help. It brought us to the service entrance! We had no idea and when we went up to the 5th floor, the elevator door opened to basically a broom closet full of supplies. We called out for someone and a waitress ran and rescued us and apologized to us. She then proceed to help us come out of the closet and bring us to our private room. Since we had 8 to our party (4 adults and 4 kids) they gave us a larger room, which was basically 2 rooms with the center wall removed. It was very nicely decorated and very private and perfect for us as we did have a couple very young kids with us (2 and 5). One pleasant surprise is they have an English menu, which helps a lot so you know what you are ordering! The special “menu of the day” which listed the fresh fish and special dishes for the day was not translated into English. That was OK since the main menu which has the different courses was in English and that is mainly what we ordered from. The guys ordered the 8 piece sushi course and the girls got the 7 piece. For the kids we got an assortment of other food…like egg, and karaage (fried chicken), BBQ kampachi fish, and udon. For normal sushi places, they ONLY serve sushi- but this place has other “non sushi” foods as well. That is the main reason wh