So as you may (or may not) know, McDonald's left Russia and then a little later Belarus too. But like everywhere else, these were franchises, so the brand is gone but not the infrastructure or the supply chains. In Russia, they got rebranded quickly into Vkusno I Tochka and kept selling the same stuff just off brand.
In Belarus, where I moved over a year ago, it was a little funnier. There's no brand at all so far. The McDonald's signs were replaced with a stylized "We're open" sign ("Мы открыты") with the yellow W/M faintly, barely resembling the golden arches.
Another difference here is a couple of new local dishes. When they first appeared, they were called with words for Polish nobility (like "Шляхецкi," if you know what I mean) because the bourgeoisie here still thinks in these terms and ofc waiting for the full on capitalism to happen. But very quickly those got changed after some backlash.
Anyway, someone in c/news suggested I do a review long time ago. So here's me having a "Native" burger ("родны" means "close to heart" really) with some new mushroom sauce, thyme french fries, and raspberry-ginger tea.
Review: It's still shit. "McDonald's" or no, it's still shit ok.
are there cool stores for buying Soviet-era stuff in Belarus? I like Soviet camera lenses and I'm getting into Soviet microphones but getting them online is hard/expensive now with Russian sanctions. might be easier for me to just visit the area
I accidentally know that there's at least one in Minsk. But it's so mom and pop that when I called the owner said "I'm at the hospital, so the store is closed for now"
well I guess it's moot the ticketing web sites won't show itineraries to Minsk due to "governmental restrictions"
I'd have to fly to Poland and walk or something