Las Vegas

Resorts World Las Vegas: Is the Hype Real?

Marcus Webb · 6 min read · Nov 2, 2024

Resorts World Las Vegas exterior

When Resorts World Las Vegas opened in June 2021, it was the first new mega-resort on the Strip since the Cosmopolitan a decade earlier. The $4.3 billion project from Genting Group promised a fresh take on Vegas luxury, with three distinct hotel brands under one roof and a focus on Asian hospitality. The question on everyone's mind: does it deliver?

The short answer is yes — with caveats. Resorts World excels at what it set out to do. The 3,500-room complex feels genuinely new. The lobby is vast and airy. The Conrad, Hilton, and Crockfords tiers offer clear differentiation for different budgets. The casino floor is spacious and well-lit, with a strong emphasis on baccarat and high-limit play that reflects Genting's Asian market expertise.

Where Resorts World stumbles is in the intangibles. The north Strip location, while improving, still feels disconnected from the heart of the action. The property lacks the personality of a Cosmopolitan or the gravitas of an ARIA. It can feel corporate and polished to a fault — impressive, but not always memorable.

That said, the food and entertainment lineup is strong. Zouk Nightclub has become a destination. Famous Foods Street Eats offers a clever take on Asian hawker fare. And the pool complex, with its dayclub and multiple pools, holds its own against Strip competitors. For travellers who want modern amenities without the themed excess of older properties, Resorts World is a solid bet. The hype was real; the execution is good enough to justify it.

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