agrueneberg and Benedikt's problem is due to embedded bitmap not
disabled. Using 'sudo fontconfig-voodoo -l ja_JP' or 'sudo ln -s
/etc/fonts/conf.avail/69-language-selector-ja-jp.conf -t
/etc/fonts/conf.d/' will remedy it.

In Sancho's case, it seems the default is to select a chinese font
(Kaiti?) which is higher in preference according to 40-nonlatin.conf,
while when using ja_JP.UTF-8 locale, it seems to use FreeSans (if I'm
not mistaken, FreeSans would give that horrible Han typeface). He should
also do the solution above, and install better fonts (Takao/IPA fonts
recommended).

By the way, even with the voodoo, DejaVu fonts are prepended to each
serif/sans-serif/monospace list, so they will be used for Latin fonts,
basic or extended. Only when it fails to find the glyph in the DejaVu
series (i.e. the Chinese/Japanese fonts) will it start looking up the
other fonts.

Okay so what is the issue here? Do you want this voodoo to be enabled by
default? Well, seeing it's supposed to match "lang=ja" only, that can be
considered.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/36761

Title:
  Without ja_JP as default environment, Japanese font looks horrible for
  certain font sizes

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