The Club World
Time Machine
"I had tears in my eyes thinking about the JAL Apex Suite I could have been sitting in. But we cannot always fly 5-star airlines..."
Markus Neubauer
Founder, Avios Intelligence
Aircraft
787 Dreamliner
Legacy Hardware
Duration
13h 40m
LHR - HND
Layout
2-3-2
The Yin-Yang Trap
Markus Score
6.5/10
Saved by the Crew
Let me be perfectly honest with you from the outset: I could have flown Japan Airlines. The Avios were sitting in my account, the routing was available, and the legendary JAL Apex Suite was whispering my name from the Oneworld terminal. But I didn't. I booked the British Airways Boeing 787 in the legacy Club World cabin from London Heathrow (LHR) to Tokyo Haneda (HND). Why? Because as the founder of Avios Intelligence, I must experience the reality of the network. We cannot always fly 5-star airlines, and sometimes, the "Yield Engine" demands that we take one for the team to report on the state of the alliance for you, my dear readers.
As I strapped into my window seat and prepared for over 13 hours in the sky, crossing the polar ice caps, I genuinely had a minor tear in my eye thinking about the sushi and unmatched privacy I was missing on JAL. What followed was an exercise in nostalgia, endurance, and the undeniable charm of British hospitality saving a deeply flawed, rapidly aging hard product.
The 2-3-2 Yin-Yang Configuration: A relic of the previous decade.

The Hardware: A Step Back into the Early 2010s
Let's address the elephant in the cabin: the seat. British Airways' original Club World flat-bed concept was revolutionary when it debuted. But flying it today on a flagship route to Tokyo feels like stepping into an aviation museum. I sat there looking at the plastic moldings, the tiny, low-resolution screen, and the bizarre layout, and I genuinely had to ask myself: "Was I even legally allowed to drink alcohol when these seats were first introduced?"
The 2-3-2 "yin-yang" layout on the 787 means half the passengers face backwards. If you are in a window seat—typically the absolute holy grail for a frequent flyer—you are treated to the infamous "Club World Hurdle." Because there is no direct aisle access, to visit the lavatory mid-flight, you must literally climb over the extended legs of the stranger sleeping next to you.
Let that sink in. In 2026, executing a delicate, high-stakes gymnastics routine in your socks at 38,000 feet, desperately trying not to kick a sleeping businessman in the shins just to stretch your legs, is a glaring reminder of how desperately the new Club Suites are needed across the entirety of the fleet.
The Awkward Stare
"There is a specific, agonizing 45-second window during boarding before you are allowed to raise the frosted privacy divider. You are forced to stare directly into the eyes of the passenger facing you, both of you silently acknowledging the bizarre intimacy of the legacy Club World design. It’s a uniquely British psychological endurance test before the seatbelt sign even turns off."
๐ซ Escape the Legacy Trap
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Search Premium Flights on AviasalesThe Culinary Mystery: Is It Intentional?
When the meal service began, my expectations were appropriately managed. British Airways catering has always been a rollercoaster, but on this flight, the presentation was genuinely baffling. The food arrived looking as though it had been aggressively plated during severe, category-four turbulence.
I sat staring at my main course for a long time. Is it intentionally designed to look this messy? Is it a psychological play to lower expectations so the taste pleasantly surprises you? We may never know.

To be fair, the taste itself was perfectly acceptable. It was classic British comfort food that fundamentally does the job of providing calories at altitude. But visually, it belongs in a premium economy cabin at best. Furthermore, unlike Qatar Airways or JAL, British Airways does not offer a "Dine on Demand" service. On a 13.5-hour flight where passengers are aggressively trying to manage intense jetlag, being forced to eat on the airline's schedule rather than your own biological clock is a massive, structural drawback to the soft product.
๐ฑ Survive the Jetlag: Instant Connectivity
After nearly 14 hours in an old seat, navigating the culinary mysteries of Club World, the last thing you want to do at Haneda Airport is hunt for a local SIM card booth. Instantly download a global eSIM before you fly and connect the second the wheels hit the tarmac in Japan.
Get Your Airalo eSIMThe Saving Graces: The Crew and the "Club Kitchen"
If the hardware is a museum piece and the food presentation is a mystery, why do we keep flying BA? Why do we subject ourselves to the 2-3-2 trap? The answer, as always, is the human element. The British Airways cabin crew on this sector were nothing short of phenomenal. They possess a specific brand of warm, witty, and unflappable professionalism that can salvage almost any flight. They anticipated needs, kept the champagne flowing, and managed a completely full cabin with a genuine smile.
The second saving grace is the legendary Club Kitchen. Because there is no Dine on Demand, BA sets up a designated area in the galley fridge. And let me tell you, it is a lifesaver. At hour seven, when you are wide awake over the Arctic circle, fighting the dry cabin air and feeling terribly peckish, there is something weirdly comforting about wandering into the galley in your flight socks.

The Club Kitchen: A midnight oasis over the polar ice caps.
You raid the fridge for finger sandwiches, grab a handful of premium snacks, and pour yourself a liberal glass of wine from the open bottles. The galley essentially becomes a midnight gathering spot for the sleepless elites of the cabin, bonding over the shared experience of surviving the long-haul.
The Final Verdict: Waiting for the Future
Enduring 13 hours and 40 minutes in the legacy Club World seat is a challenge. It is a product that has been outpaced, outclassed, and out-designed by almost every major competitor in the Oneworld alliance. You book this flight for the direct routing, for the Avios redemption value, or because you simply have no other choice on the schedule.
However, knowing that British Airways is actively rolling out the spectacular new Club Suites across their 777s and A350s gives us hope. Until those retrofits reach the entirety of the 787 fleet, you must mentally prepare yourself for the gymnastics. Bring a good book, appreciate the fantastic crew, raid the Club Kitchen fridge without mercy, and keep your eyes on the horizon. It’s about time this seat was retired to the history books where it belongs.
๐๏ธ Elevate Your Ground Game in Tokyo
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