Tokyo 26 doesn't try to be a destination restaurant. It just keeps being good — and on East 26th Street in Sioux Falls, that turns out to be plenty.
The menu covers Japanese dining the way most people actually want it: fresh sushi rolls, nigiri, sashimi, and cooked plates that don't require a special occasion to order. They serve lunch and dinner, handle casual weeknight cravings and low-key weekend meals without much fuss, and keep the atmosphere relaxed enough that you're not performing anything just by showing up.
Locals on the east side return here because the sushi is made fresh, the room doesn't have a chip on its shoulder, and affordable doesn't mean afterthought. It's the kind of neighborhood Japanese restaurant that earns regulars not through novelty but through consistency — the highest bar most restaurants quietly fail.