
D'Boss Karaoke
D'Boss Karaoke is a budget-tier venue tucked on a side street a few blocks off Nagoya Hill, running as a cheaper alternative to the larger KTVs on the main strip. The venue has about 10 rooms across two floors, with modest furnishings, basic sound systems, and a short drink and snack menu. Room rentals are the main draw; hourly rates undercut Memory, Hawaii, and Grand Dragon by 30 to 40 percent, which makes it popular with younger Indonesian groups and Singaporean visitors on tight budgets. Hostess services are available but less aggressively pushed than at the larger venues, and several rooms operate as self-serve karaoke without any escort component. Song library is smaller but still covers Mandarin, Indonesian, and English. The beer promotions (buy-four-get-one-free buckets) are the main draw on weekends, and the venue has a steady regular crowd of local KTV workers unwinding on off-shifts.
Where to stay near D'Boss Karaoke
Hotels and rentals within walking distance.
What to Expect
A no-frills karaoke setup with small rooms, worn-in furniture, and basic equipment that works reliably. The vibe is casual and locals-heavy midweek, shifting to mixed local and foreign groups on weekends. Staff are friendly, and the billing model is simpler than at the bigger venues.
Low-key, functional, budget-first; the friendliest KTV in central Nagoya.
Indonesian pop dominant, Mandarin pop second, English classics and modern chart tracks
Casual. Shorts and sandals acceptable.
Budget-conscious groups, younger travelers, locals, visitors wanting karaoke without the hostess pressure of bigger venues
Cash in IDR strongly preferred, QRIS available for drinks, cards only for tabs above 500000 IDR
Price Range
Small room 150000 IDR/hr, medium room 250000 IDR/hr, Bintang bucket 5-for-4 200000 IDR, hostess drink 130000 IDR
Small room ~$10/hr, medium ~$17/hr, beer bucket ~$13, hostess drink ~$8.70
Hours
20:00-03:30 daily, extended to 04:30 Fri-Sat
Insider Tip
Self-serve rooms are available and usually cheaper than hosted rooms; specify at reception. Split the bucket deal across bigger groups for the best per-beer price. The top floor has better sound; ask for upstairs when you book.
Full Review
D'Boss Karaoke targets the bottom end of Nagoya's KTV pricing curve, and the venue's success depends on being cheap without being broken. The building is unassuming, with a small neon sign and a narrow staircase leading to the upstairs rooms. The reception desk is in a tight lobby, and the process is straightforward: pay a room-hour rate, order drinks and snacks, decide whether to add hostess service or keep the room self-serve. Rooms are sized for small groups, with most holding four to six guests comfortably.
Equipment is older than at Hawaii or Memory but serviceable. Touchscreen song selection works in most rooms, and microphone quality varies room to room. The top-floor rooms have newer speakers and are worth requesting. Song library is smaller than at the larger KTVs but covers the main Indonesian, Mandarin, and English catalogs; niche Hokkien and Cantonese tracks are thin. The drink menu is short: Bintang large, Bintang small, a few spirits at marked-up prices, and soft drinks.
The hostess component is optional and less pressured. Staff present it as an add-on rather than a default, and walk-ins can book rooms without any escort involvement. Pricing for hostess services, when requested, is at the low end of the Nagoya market. The venue has a strong regular crowd of Indonesian KTV workers who come in on their off-shifts, which gives midweek sessions a local feel unusual for Nagoya's tourist-heavy strip.
Safety is straightforward. Bill disputes are rare because the billing model is simpler than the bigger venues, and the small size means staff keep closer track of each room. Drink spiking has not been widely reported. Transport via GoJek is easy at any hour. Compared with Grand Dragon, Memory, and Hawaii, D'Boss trades polish for price, and that trade suits first-time KTV visitors or groups who want to try karaoke without a Singapore-sized bill at the end.
The Neighborhood
D'Boss sits on a side street about three blocks off the Nagoya Hill Superblock, adjacent to smaller massage parlors and late-night warung food stalls. Foot traffic is lighter than on the main KTV strip.
Getting There
From Batam Centre ferry terminal, GoJek or Grab to Nagoya runs 15 to 25 minutes and costs 30000 to 50000 IDR. From Harbour Bay ferry the ride is under 10 minutes. From Batu Ampar ferry terminal a short GoJek costs 15000 to 25000 IDR. Hang Nadim Airport is 25 minutes by taxi.
Other Venues in Nagoya Entertainment District

Pacific Palace
Large entertainment complex in the heart of Nagoya's nightlife district. Features a main dance floor, KTV rooms, and multiple bars under one roof.

Golden Prawn 888
Popular KTV venue with private rooms of varying sizes and a full food and drink menu. Caters mainly to Singaporean and Malaysian visitors on weekend trips.

Arena Pub
Late-night bar in the Nagoya entertainment area with live bands covering pop and rock hits. Gets busy after midnight, especially on weekends.

New Hollywood Disco
Long-running Nagoya disco playing a mix of Indonesian pop, Mandarin hits, and Western dance music. One of the louder, more energetic options in the district.

Wow KTV
Modern KTV complex with well-maintained private rooms and an extensive song library in multiple languages. Popular with groups visiting from Singapore.

Grand Dragon Pub & KTV
Two-floor entertainment venue near Nagoya Hill combining a street-level bar with private karaoke rooms upstairs. Draws a younger crowd, 18 to 35, on weekends.