Ahmedabad
Chengdu
Chengdu is about 3Ă the size of Ahmedabad by population.
At a glance
Weather, month by month
What locals say
Ahmedabad comes across as a busy, highly social city where ordinary life is shaped by strong neighborhood networks, visible civic order, and frequent friction over noise, traffic, and public behavior. People seem proud of the cityâs Gujarati identity and commercial energy, but they also complain a lot about aggression, policing, and the way small disputes can escalate fast. Daily life feels practical and middle-class at its core: cafĂŠs, auto rides, society politics, temple routines, and constant movement around work, school, and markets. At the same time, the cityâs mood can swing sharply between warmth and volatility, with public tragedies and viral incidents often dominating the conversation.
- Noise and nuisance3
- Aggressive public behavior4
- Communal tension and social hostility4
- Traffic and emergency access2
- Cost of living in casual outings1
- Civic response in emergencies2
- Strong local identity and culture3
- Neighborly moments and stories2
- Everyday resilience2
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Chengdu comes across as a huge, food-first city that still feels surprisingly social and laid-back in the day-to-day. People talk about it as a place where you can spend hours eating, wandering parks, browsing markets, and meeting friends over tea or drinks rather than rushing from one landmark to another. It has a visible foreigner/expat scene, plenty of student energy, and lots of small-interest communities from skate parks to D&D to volunteering, but finding your people can still take some effort. The tradeoff is that some everyday life gets filtered through a big-city Chinese systemâapps, WeChat groups, Didi, and navigating neighborhoodsâwhile the cityâs size and humidity can make the weather and logistics feel more tiring than the travel brochures suggest.
- Hard to make friends / social circles feel segmented5
- Nightlife skews young or hard to navigate4
- Weather and seasonal discomfort4
- Food options for non-Sichuan tastes can require effort3
- Navigation / airport / arrival friction3
- Food is the main event8
- Easy to find hobbies and niche communities5
- Strong expat/foreigner ecosystem5
- Parks, slow wandering, and urban leisure4
- Shopping and markets3
âWeâre gonna visit Chengdu soon and are huge fans of Sichuan cuisine. We would love to get some recommendations for authentic hot pot places (preferably Chongqing version) or other restaurants or foods youâd recommend us to try.â
âHave been in Chengdu for a couple of days now and really loving it. Iâve been out and about by the bridge and headed to Lan Kwai Fong afterwards wanting to dance - but literally everyone around there was sub 20 if I was guessing.â
Food & nightlife
The food scene looks heavily cafĂŠ- and street-oriented, with enough spending power in parts of the city that even basic cafĂŠ coffee is described as crossing âš250. The posts do not give a full restaurant map, but they suggest a city where people go out for casual drinks and snacks, and where public eating habits can become culture-war flashpointsâlike debates over sitting on the floor or eating in unconventional settings. Given the broader Gujarat context, it likely feels strongly local and socially coded: familiar snacks, vegetarian-leaning everyday eating, and a mix of modest neighborhood food and pricier urban cafĂŠs.
There is some nightlife and event culture, but it does not read like a city known for wild late-night scenes. One post about 'Nightlife Lovers' exists, but most discussion centers more on festivals, noise, cafĂŠs, and public gatherings than on bars or clubbing. The vibe seems more selective and cautious than carefree, with late-night activity often filtered through neighborhood complaints, commuting, and social rules rather than open-ended partying.
The food scene is the clearest daily-life superpower here. Redditors talk about stuffing themselves with Sichuan food, hunting for hot pot, street food, and neighborhood restaurants, and using specific districts like Yulin as food bases. At the same time, there is enough variety that people also ask about coffee, western food, vegetarian options, Cantonese food, pizza, and non-Sichuan restaurants, so the city is not just one-note mala. Overall, Chengdu reads as a city where food is both a civic identity and a practical social activity: people meet to eat, wander to eat, and choose neighborhoods partly by where they can eat well.
Nightlife seems active, but it is not described as a single obvious scene. People ask where to go for bars, hip-hop, R&B clubs, expat-friendly clubs, and age-appropriate nightlife, which suggests the options are there but spread across different pockets and can be hard to decode without local help. Lan Kwai Fong comes up as a known zone, yet one visitor found it full of very young crowds. The overall vibe is more âfind the right bar, club, or live house for your subgroupâ than a universal pub culture.
Weather vs. what locals say
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The provided material says little directly about weather, but the lived feeling is that heat is part of the background and people talk more about noise, crowding, and social pressure than about pleasant climate. In Ahmedabad, weather is probably accepted as something to endure rather than romanticize, while the more emotionally charged complaints are about public disorder, congestion, and the stress of city life. So even without many explicit weather posts, the sentiment reads as practical: locals seem more preoccupied with surviving the city than discussing the forecast.
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The weather sentiment is mixed-to-negative on comfort, even when people are not talking about extremes. In the posts, winter is often framed as something people plan around, with visitors checking whether 6°C-ish days will be a dealbreaker, while one expat says they have been getting repeated respiratory infections after moving from Wisconsin. That said, the concern is more about dampness, seasonal chill, and general body adaptation than about dramatic cold. So the stats may look manageable on paper, but locals and long-term visitors seem to treat the climate as something that can wear on you over time.
In short
- Chengdu is about 3Ă the size of Ahmedabad by population.
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