
Self-guided audio tours written by people who actually live there.

Beneath the polished glass of Taichung’s modern skyscrapers lies a landscape scarred by forgotten political battles and whispers of long-buried scandals. Follow this self-guided audio tour to peel back the layers of a city that hides its darkest secrets in plain sight. Discover the hidden histories that casual tourists ignore while roaming the halls of the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts and the quiet corners of the Taichung Literature Museum. What triggered the desperate midnight rebellion that once threatened to burn the city to the ground? How does the architecture of the Taichung City Hall mask a century of systemic political betrayal? Why does a single nondescript stone in the garden hold the key to a missing merchant’s fortune? Traverse through time as drama unfolds at every corner. Rewire your perception of these streets. Unlock the ghosts of Taichung and begin your descent into the past.

Neon lights flicker across Chaoyang’s skyline but beneath the city’s shine hide layers of intrigue few ever glimpse. This self-guided audio tour invites you to wander hidden corners and iconic plazas to uncover stories that defy the guidebooks. Decode lost rebel signals at Qiuhonggu Square. Which broken agreement at the Huilai Monument Archaeology Park nearly redrew a nation’s fate overnight? Why did a construction mishap spark a hush-hush scandal at Ding Sheng BHW Taiwan Central Plaza? And whose footsteps echo in these empty alleyways under each September rain? Let curiosity guide your stride through political stand-offs, unspoken betrayals, and vanished memorials. Every turn peels away another mask from Chaoyang’s incredible past. Feel the city’s pulse shift as you cross from marketplace to monument, chasing energies few notice. Plunge into Chaoyang’s secrets and let the city’s untold stories pull you deeper. Your search for hidden truth begins now.
The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.
In 1986, a tea shop owner at Chun Shui Tang teahouse in Taichung added tapioca pearls to a cold milk tea on a whim, and accidentally created a drink that would spread to every city on earth. The teahouse still operates on Sichuan Road, and while the exact origin story is contested by other claimants, Taichung is comfortable enough with its legacy to serve boba on practically every corner without making a fuss about it. The city moves at a different register than Taipei -- more relaxed, warmer in the south, less rushed in the way it presents itself.
The Japanese colonial period left a grid of wide boulevards and institutional buildings that still give parts of the city an unusual orderliness.
The National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts, established in 1988, is one of the largest art museums in Asia and is free to enter. The National Museum of Natural Science in the north of the city draws school groups from across Taiwan. Over a thousand registered temples serve a city of under three million people, and the Dajia Mazu Pilgrimage -- where devotees carry a statue of the sea goddess Mazu 340 kilometres over nine days in early spring -- is one of the largest religious events in the world. Feng Jia Night Market is where the city eats when it goes out: stinky tofu, oyster omelettes, scallion pancakes, and at least twenty variations on bubble tea.

Before you walk.
Taichung has limited metro coverage (the Green Line opened in 2021 and covers a corridor through the city). YouBike (a bike-sharing system, very inexpensive) is widely available and excellent for flat sections. Uber and local taxi apps work well. The national intercity bus and train to Taipei takes about an hour by high-speed rail.
Taiwan consistently ranks among Asia's safest countries and Taichung is no exception. Walking with headphones in any part of the city -- day or night in busy areas -- is comfortable and unremarkable. Night markets in particular are crowded and safe well past midnight.
A suncake (taiyang bing) -- a flaky pastry with a maltose filling, unique to Taichung -- is the city's designated souvenir food. For a meal, the Zhonghua Night Market and Fengjia Night Market offer the full range of Taiwanese street food. Bubble tea from Chun Shui Tang on Sichuan Road is worth seeking out for historical credit.
Taiwan has excellent mobile coverage and free WiFi in many public spaces, MRT stations and convenience stores (7-Eleven and FamilyMart are ubiquitous). Download before heading out for the smoothest experience; offline playback handles any gaps in coverage without interruption.
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4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.
This tour was such a great way to see the city. The stories were interesting without feeling too scripted, and I loved being able to explore at my own pace.
This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.