Pay phones are still common in many places around the world. An indicator may be those mapped on OSM: https://taginfo.openstreetmap.org/tags/amenity=telephone#map
They are common in my country, but I hardly ever see anyone use them.
Open it.
What game is that?
Google says ghost wire tokyo
i found a working red telephone box in stratford-upon-avon last week.
most of them have been turned into defibrilator access points, or mini libraries or ripped out entirely these days.
I love Kanazawa.
15K Australian public phone booths are now Freephones and some are free wi-fi hotspots. I don’t think I’ve used one since the late 1990s, though.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-08-03/telstra-has-made-its-15000-payphones-free/100344664
Why different emergency number for popo?
Having only one emergency number isn’t the standard everywhere in the world. In my childhood here in Austria I learned that the fire department is 122, the police is 133, ambulance is 144; these numbers still work AFAIK, but nowadays the government’s recommendation is to dial 112 (the EU-wide emergency number) no matter what you need.