Experience a similar environment from when Michael proposed to Cynthia. Dining in the dark is a unique gastronomic experience where diners enjoy a meal while their sight is removed, enhancing their other senses—taste, smell, and touch
Battista's Hole in the Wall has been a Las Vegas favorite for over 50 years. It's known for its traditional Italian entrees, exceptional service, and its unique decor. Meals include your choice of soup or salad, garlic bread, after dinner cappuccino, and complimentary house wine!
A hidden, signless pizza parlor located on the third floor of The Cosmopolitan hotel, accessible by taking the escalators and then walking through an unmarked hallway filled with record art. Seek out Secret Pizza, a slice shop at the end of a record-lined corridor, far away from the bustle of the casino floor.
The Halloween Emporium & Haunted Tea Room offers a unique combination of scares and sweets. First, explore the Halloween Emporium filled with costumes, decorations, and all things spooky. Then, head to the Haunted Tea Room for a delicious afternoon tea with a spooky twist. Expect eerie decorations, spooky surprises, and maybe even a ghostly encounter with your tea and scones!
Meow Wolf Las Vegas is an immersive art and entertainment complex located at AREA15, just west of the Las Vegas Strip. The main attraction is Omega Mart, an interactive supermarket that combines art, technology, and storytelling. Visitors can explore a whimsical environment filled with intriguing installations and hidden pathways, where they can engage with various interactive experiences. The complex also features other attractions like Lost Spirits and Illuminarium, making it a unique destination for both locals and tourists
The Arte Museum is a must-see multi-sensory immersive art exhibition on the Las Vegas Strip, showcasing work inspired by nature.
Step inside the living nightmares inspired by Universal’s legacy of cinematic and live entertainment horrors. In a darkened warehouse on the edge of Las Vegas, a relentless spectacle of horror is rising – Universal Horror Unleashed. Enter the evils of four haunted houses, each with their own terrifying story. Prepare to face twisted creatures, disturbing legends and horrors pulled straight from your worst nightmares.
Ghost Adventures host and executive producer Zak Bagans opened Las Vegas’ first award-winning Haunted Museum in the historic Wengert Mansion, a building known for decades for its dark occult history. Venture through creepy hallways and secret passages while exploring paranormal exhibits and cursed artifacts, as well as possessions once owned by notorious serial killers.
Las Vegas is an oasis in the desert where no one sleeps, and every vice you can imagine is available—for the right price. But debauchery and hedonism are the lighter side of a more ominous history. The isolation of Sin City was not only the perfect place to escape and act out fantasies, it was also an ideal place to do a whole bunch of nuclear testing.
Tom Devlin's Monster Museum is located in historic Boulder City, NV, between Las Vegas and the Hoover Dam. Our mission is to preserve the art and history of special makeup effects. This gallery of Tom's art includes everything from screen-used props and creature suits to custom pieces representing monsters throughout movie history.
Maintained by the Bureau of Land Management as part of its National Landscape Conservation System, Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area is a chunk of land just 15 miles west of Las Vegas. Red Rock Canyon showcases the large red rock formations from which it gets its name.
The four-acre Ethel M Botanical Cactus Garden. Over 300 species of cacti and succulents make this Nevada's largest collection of its kind, and one of the biggest in the world.
The Las Vegas Valley is the improbable site of world-class fossils of late Pleistocene megafauna (large animals), including such iconic species as the saber-toothed cat, the giant ground sloth, the mammoth, and the American horse, camel, and lion.
Hidden Forest Trail, an out and back (~10.4 miles), which takes you to the Hidden Forest Cabin, is a long and challenging hike. The trail starts with desert scenery and goes into the pine forest. It has a gradual incline on loose gravel paths for the entire trail up to the cabin. It is best to wear proper hiking boots, and bringing hiking poles will also be helpful. By the cabin, there is a tent site, picnic table, benches, and an outhouse. Bring a lot of water in case there's no water source running at the cabin. To get to the Hidden Forest Trailhead, you need to drive on the dirt/gravel road
The Mob Museum lets you explore this history with exhibits on famous criminals, law enforcement battles, and even items used in crimes. While not a traditional haunted attraction, some believe the spirits of those involved in this violent history linger within the walls. Take a tour and see for yourself if the museum lives up to its spooky reputation!
The Hoover Dam is a concrete arch-gravity dam in the Black Canyon of the Colorado River, on the border between the U.S. states of Nevada and Arizona. Constructed between 1931 and 1936, during the Great Depression, it was dedicated on September 30, 1935, by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Its construction was the result of a massive effort involving thousands of workers, and cost over 100 lives. Bills passed by Congress during its construction referred to it as Hoover Dam (after President Herbert Hoover), but the Roosevelt administration named it Boulder Dam. In 1947, Congress restored the name Hoover Dam.