Before the velvet ropes, celebrity chefs, and ultra-lounges, Las Vegas conducted its most audacious experiment: it tried to be a family town.
For a fleeting decade, the Strip wasn't just about what happened after dark; it was a world of dragons dueling on the hour, pirates battling on a man-made lagoon, and rivers flowing through the heart of a pyramid. If you remember the heat from Excalibur's moat, the cannon-fire at Treasure Island, or the roar of a coaster inside a pink dome, you experienced a masterfully engineered fantasy. But it wasn't just a fantasy, it was a business plan.
From the creators of Vegas Feedz, '90s Vegas: The Family-Friendly Experiment and the Pivot to Luxury takes you behind the curtain to reveal the brilliant, calculated strategy behind the spectacle. This is not just a nostalgic trip; it's a definitive account of how Las Vegas built an empire on scheduled wonder and then, just as deliberately, rewrote the script for an adult audience. Discover how free curbside shows were acquisition tools, why mascots served as a wayfinding system for parents, and when the math decided a lounge was worth more than a lost arcade.
Inside, you'll explore the lost kingdoms of the Strip, including:
Murphy the Dragon & Excalibur: The mechanical bedtime story that taught the Strip to keep time with fire and fog.
The Battle of Buccaneer Bay: Treasure Island's free war on water and its pivot to the sultry Sirens of TI.
The Luxor Nile River Ride: The tranquil, short-lived boat tour that oriented guests before it vanished into the carpet.
MGM Grand Adventures: The ambitious theme park bolted to a casino that learned a hard lesson about summer heat and opportunity cost.
Wet 'n Wild & The Adventuredome: A tale of two parks, one that battled the desert sun, and one that ignored it under a five-acre glass roof.
Secret Tunnels & Backstage Corridors: Debunking the myths to reveal the real infrastructure that made the magic arrive on time, every time.
Combining deep archival research with the vivid, on-the-ground storytelling that has made Vegas Feedz a trusted voice on the city's history, this book reveals that the family-friendly era wasn't a mistake; it was a machine. A machine that worked perfectly until a new one paid better.