The Neon Pink Lighting, a synthetic, humming glow that tastes of ozone and makes every human face look like a low-budget music video from 2004, witnessed the hour-long, high-stakes dispute over who actually paid for the midnight bubble tea.
The Wall-Mounted Desk, a clever, space-saving slab of industrial wood, cold to the touch and smelling faintly of lemon polish, watched us spread out three different maps and four conflicting opinions on where to find the best winter nourishment in the city.
The Firm Mattress, a surface that prioritizes architectural integrity over lumbar support, smelling of fresh linens and stubbornness, recorded the synchronized, guttural sighs of three adults realizing that staying up until 3 a.m. is a young person's game we no longer play.
The Hallway Water Dispenser, a stainless steel sentinel in a corridor of sterile silence, echoing with the rhythmic drip-drop of hydration, heard the hushed, sleepy conversations of our midnight runs—the kind of fragmented, honest talk that only happens when the rest of the world is asleep.
The Foosball Table, a chaotic battlefield of plastic figures and rhythmic clicking situated in the heart of the lobby's social buzz, witnessed a friendship almost collapse over a goal that was, in all likelihood, a complete and total accident.
If these walls could speak
I often suspect that the rooms at Moxy Taichung are designed to provoke a certain kind of restlessness—a curated, high-voltage energy that clashes beautifully with the clumsy reality of three friends who have spent far too many hours trapped in a rental car. "Are we actually lost, or is this a scenic detour?" someone had asked, and the answer was written in our exhausted eyes. You wouldn't believe the level of intensity we brought to a game of foosball; it was less about the sport and more about a desperate need to prove something to people who already knew we were idiots. We arrived in January, when the air in Taichung is a crisp, dry thing that bites at your cheeks and makes you feel awake even when you are profoundly exhausted. We carried with us a series of bets—mostly about who would lose their luggage or who would be the first to complain about the bed—and as it turned out, we were all wrong because we all complained simultaneously. There is a specific kind of joy in this shared failure, a portable home built not of walls but of mutual roasting, where the neon lights of the lobby act as a stage for our collective absurdity. Perhaps Moxy Taichung intended for us to be trendy and vibrant, but we were merely tired people in a very bright room, finding a strange, luminous comfort in the fact that none of us knew exactly where we were going, as long as we were going there together.
The soft, amber glow of Taichung from the heights.
- Sip a cocktail at the XOXO rooftop bar as the city lights awaken.
- Brave the sharp January breeze on a walk to the nearby MRT station.