EarlyVegas.com

Las Vegas Attraction Reviews


X Scream

After reaching speeds of 30 mph, the car jerks to a sudden halt at the end of the track, with nothing but 900 feet of air between you and the ground. X Scream might just be one of the ultimate thrill rides in the world.


Tuscany Kitchen

Visitors can watch award-winning chefs prepare a wide variety of dishes in the 1,170-square-foot Tuscany Kitchen.


Search of the Obelisk

The ride begins in the elevator as a snapped cable leaves you plunging into the depths of an excavation. A series of twists and turns ensue as the battle over the obelisk continues, including a high-speed chase through the mysterious caverns in the archeological dig site.


Auto Collection

Once inside, you can expect to view only the best in paintings, sculptures and other impressive works by the globe’s most influential and renowned artists.


The Auto Collections at Imperial Palace

Located on the fifth level of the Imperial Palace Hotel & Casino self-parking facility, The Auto Collections is home to a rotating display of more than 300 classic cars including racing cars, muscle cars, touring roadsters and many others.


Bodies The Exhibition

“Bodies…The Exhibition” has finally made its debut in Las Vegas. Twenty-one whole-body specimens are on display throughout the exhibit in various poses illustrating the body in motion.


Mirage Aquarium

This 20,000 gallon spectacle is home to new, brighter artificial corals that call to mind the exotic beauty of such tropical locales as Australia’s Great Barrier Reef.


Luxor IMAX

MAX films are projected on a screen measuring nearly seven stories high. The theater at Luxor Las Vegas seats 312 viewers and features a 15,000-watt sound system, eight channel, multi-dimensional, digital surround sound system


Fall of Atlantis

The Fall of Atlantis fountain show will captivate you with its stunning special effects.


King Tut's Tomb

Located at Luxor Las Vegas, the Tomb and Museum of King Tutankhamen transports visitors back to a time when ancient pharaohs constructed opulent temples and pyramids to house their bodies through eternity.