April 22, 2008

The Ultimate Las Vegas Nightclub Ticket!

Club Hopping
The Ultimate Las Vegas Nightclub Hopping Package is the best way to access all the hottest Las Vegas nightclubs with no cover charge and no wait in line! Lines at Vegas nightclubs can be as long as 2 or 3 hours at the best clubs, so skip the queues with the Ultimate Las Vegas Nightclub Hopping Package - the Ultimate Las Vegas Nightclub ticket!

You will also enjoy discounts and special offers at a wide variety of local restaurants and retailers. See below for full list of free entries, discounts and special offers.

Book the Ultimate Las Vegas Nightclub Hopping Package ahead of time to take advantage of jumping the queue. Don’t waste time waiting in lines.

July 14, 2006

The Rules: Tipping

When in doubt, tip. The usual rate in restaurants or taxis is fifteen to twenty percent. In your hotel, for assistance with luggage, tip $1-2 per bag; for valet parking, $2; for maid service, $1-2 per day at the end of your stay; and for concrete help from a concierge, such as making a reservation, $5. You’re supposed to tip dealers at the gaming tables a chip or two each time you win (you can also place bets on behalf of the dealer, if you choose). Bar staff, or cocktail waitresses bringing free drinks, normally expect $1-2 per drink.

May 14, 2006

The Rules: An Adult Playground

While Las Vegas has certainly cleaned up its act since the early days of Mob domination, there’s little truth in the notion that it’s become a family destination. In fact, for kids, it’s doesn’t begin to compare to somewhere like Orlando. Several casinos have added theme parks or fun rides to fill those odd nongambling moments, but only ten percent of visitors bring children, and the crowds that cluster around the exploding volcanoes and pirate battles along the Strip remain almost exclusively adult.

February 14, 2006

The Rules: The Customer is King

The customer is king in Las Vegas. What the visitor wants, the city provides. If you come in search of the cheapest destination in America, you’ll enjoy paying rock-bottom rates for accommodation and hunting out the best buffet bargains.

If it’s style and opulence you’re after, by contrast, you can dine in the finest restaurants, shop in the most chic stores, and watch world-class entertainment; it’ll cost you, but not as much as it would anywhere else.

The same guidelines apply to gambling. The Strip giants cater to those who want sophisticated high-roller heavens, where tuxedoed James Bond lookalikes toss insouciant bankrolls onto the roulette tables. Others prefer their casinos to be sinful and seedy, inhabited by hard-bitten heavy-smoking low-lifes; there is no shortage of that type of joint either, especially downtown.

January 22, 2006

The Rules: Gambling

The casinos want you to gamble, and they’ll do almost anything to lure you in; thus the huge moving walkways that pluck you from the Strip sidewalk, almost against your will, and sweep you into places like Caesars Palace.

Once you’re inside, on the other hand, the last thing they want is for you to leave. Whatever you came in for, you won’t be able to do it without crisscrossing the casino floor innumerable times; as for finding your way out, that can be virtually impossible.

The action keeps going day and night, and in this windowless - and clock-free - environment you rapidly lose track of which is which.