Sega Cofi
Sega Cofi is a local cafe located in Quezon City, PH. Check in here with the Pulled Coffee app to earn real cash rewards. Independent cafes count toward all challenges including Pulled 50 through Pulled 300.
Sega Cofi is a neighborhood cafe that Pulled members visit across Quezon City, PH. The idea is simple. Buy the coffee you were going to buy, log the stop in the app, and earn cash toward real payouts. Your first check-in here also drops a new pin on your personal coffee map.
Local cafes like this one are built for lingering. You can expect a friendly counter, a straightforward menu of espresso drinks and brewed coffee, and a room that suits a slow morning or an afternoon with a laptop. The charm is in the routine and the regulars. Order something simple, find a seat, and let it be the easy part of your day.
The shop sits in Quezon City, PH, which makes it an easy addition to a coffee route through Quezon City. Whether you live nearby or are passing through, it is a practical place to check in and keep your streak going. Locals fold it into the morning commute, and visitors use it as a reliable anchor while they explore the rest of the area. It is part of the wider coffee map Pulled tracks across PH.
Thinking about what to get at Sega Cofi? Start with your usual and branch out from there. The point is to enjoy the cup, not to optimize it. Check in once you have ordered and the visit folds into your streak and your challenges, turning an ordinary stop into measurable progress.
About Quezon City
Quezon City is the largest city in the Philippines by population and area, occupying a substantial portion of Metro Manila. The city has built a distinctive café culture over the last decade, integrating Filipino coffee traditions, Chinese-Filipino café culture, and a contemporary specialty wave that has emerged primarily since 2014. The local coffee scene operates in close conversation with broader Metro Manila culture but retains a Quezon City character anchored by the large university population and the residential city's distinct neighborhoods.
The traditional Filipino coffee culture runs through the kapehan, a small café-bar that serves Filipino coffee, pastries, and simple food. The institution is part of broader Filipino food culture and operates alongside the Chinese-Filipino café tradition that has shaped urban Manila for generations. Several Quezon City cafés operate in the same heritage tradition, alongside the broader Manila network of older establishments.
The third wave arrived in Quezon City around 2014 and has built quickly. Yardstick Coffee, opened in 2014 in Makati but with a Quezon City presence, became one of Metro Manila's first major contemporary specialty roasters. Single Origin, EDSA Beverage Design Studio, and a wider network of contemporary cafés have built a serious scene across the metro area. The local Filipino specialty wave benefits from direct sourcing from Philippine coffee growing regions, particularly Benguet, Cordillera, and Sagada in northern Luzon.
The neighborhoods stratify clearly. Tomas Morato and the surrounding entertainment district hold the densest concentration of contemporary specialty cafés in Quezon City. Maginhawa Street, the food-and-café corridor near the University of the Philippines, holds the densest food-coffee integration in the city. Katipunan, the corridor near Ateneo de Manila University and Miriam College, holds student-driven cafés. Cubao, the central commercial district, holds high-volume cafés alongside specialty addresses. The Eastwood City complex holds upmarket cafés serving the upper-middle-class residential population.
What separates Quezon City from Makati or Bonifacio Global City is the residential character. Quezon City is a residential and educational city more than a commercial one, and the cafés reflect that. Customers stay longer at Quezon City cafés. Student traffic supports a study-friendly café culture. The pace is slower than the more transactional Makati café register.
Philippine-grown specialty coffee has become an increasingly important part of the local scene. The northern Luzon coffee growing regions, particularly Benguet and the Cordillera mountain area, produce Arabica that supplies many of Manila's better specialty roasters. Sagada, Cordillera, and the Mountain Province have built reputations for distinctive single-origin coffees over the last decade.
What surprises a visitor is the food-coffee integration. Many Quezon City specialty cafés serve excellent Filipino food alongside coffee, and the integration is more native than in most Western cities. Sisig, lugaw, pancit, and adobo all appear on café menus alongside specialty pour-overs and flat whites. The pattern reflects the broader Filipino preference for full-day food-and-beverage social infrastructure.
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