Discount casino gear coupon. Toll-Free Number: (800) 752-9746
Reservation Number: (866) 746-7671
Suites: 2,563 Price Range: $60-$250
Restaurants: 18 (1 open 24 hours)
Buffets: B- $16.99/$32.99 (Saturday/Sunday) L - $24.99/$32.99 (Saturday/Sunday)
D-$32.99/$34.99 (Friday/Saturday)
Seafood Buffet: D-$44.99/$47.99 (Saturday/Sunday) (opens 3:30 pm)
Casino Size: 117,330 Square Feet
Games Offered: Slots, Video Poker, Blackjack, Craps, Roulette, Sports Book, Race Book, Mini-Baccarat, Poker, Pai Gow, Pai Gow Poker, Let It Ride, Three Card Poker, Four CardPoker, Ultimate Texas Hold 'Em, Keno
Overnight RV Parking: Free/RV Dump: No
Special Features: the 20-store shopping mall. Three wedding chapels. Penn and Teller stage show.
Reservation Number: (866) 746-7671
Suites: 2,563 Price Range: $60-$250
Restaurants: 18 (1 open 24 hours)
Buffets: B- $16.99/$32.99 (Saturday/Sunday) L - $24.99/$32.99 (Saturday/Sunday)
D-$32.99/$34.99 (Friday/Saturday)
Seafood Buffet: D-$44.99/$47.99 (Saturday/Sunday) (opens 3:30 pm)
Casino Size: 117,330 Square Feet
Games Offered: Slots, Video Poker, Blackjack, Craps, Roulette, Sports Book, Race Book, Mini-Baccarat, Poker, Pai Gow, Pai Gow Poker, Let It Ride, Three Card Poker, Four CardPoker, Ultimate Texas Hold 'Em, Keno
Overnight RV Parking: Free/RV Dump: No
Special Features: the 20-store shopping mall. Three wedding chapels. Penn and Teller stage show.
Casino Profile - Rio All-Suites Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada
The Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino rumor mill is once again churning, and the latest gossip is that the off-Strip property is headed for demolition to make way for a Major League Baseball (MLB).
- The Rio Suites Hotel & Casino has an expensive (but good) buffet according to my wife's sister who has stayed here in the past. There is a fun Mardi Gras style show that takes place above the casino floor.
- Themed by Brazilian masquerade, the Rio has a lot more to offer than most off strip casinos in Las Vegas. Parking and valet are still free, and they have a wide variety of restaurants, bars, and other entertainment to go with one of the larger gaming spaces in town. It’s also home to the World Series of Poker every summer.
Located just off the Las Vegas Strip, the Rio All-Suites Hotel and Casino offers great buffets and comfortable rooms with a Brazilian carnival theme. The property first opened in 1990 and wasthe first all-suite resort in the Las Vegas area.
The all-suite hotel at the Rio has 2,563 rooms, all of which offer floor-to-ceiling windows, sofa, 32' TV with Pay-Per-View movies, mini bar, in-room safe, iron/board, and hairdryer.Nightly rates range from $40 up to $259 a night (not including resort fee). The hotel has a spa and salon and Voodoo beach, a pool complex that includes four different pool areas, cascadingwaterfalls, three whirlpools, poolside spa treatments, and two bars (Cruzan Island Bar and VooDoo Beach Bar) where you can enjoy specialty cocktails made by flair bartenders.
The casino at the Rio has a masquerade-theme and offers over 1200 gaming machines as well as many table games including Blackjack, Craps, Roulette, Baccarat, Let it Ride, Pai Gow Poker,Texas Hold 'Em Bonus Poker, Mississippi Stud and Ultimate Texas Hold 'Em. The casino, which is the home of the World Series of Poker, also has a poker room and a race and sports book.
Rio Casino Sale
Be sure to join the Total Rewards program to earn points at the Rio as well as at many other Caesars properties in Vegas and elsewhere.
The Rio offers a very diverse array of casual dining options, including the Royal India Bistro, KJ Dim Sum & Seafood, the All-American Bar and Grille, Pho Da Nang Vietnamese Kitchen,Guy Fieri’s El Burro Borracho, and Hash House A Go-Go. For something more upscale there is also Voodoo Steakhouse. Be sure to use the coupon from the 2017 American Casino Guide to receive $10off at Voodoo Steakhouse!
Perhaps the most popular restaurant at the Rio is its Carnival World and Seafood Buffet where you can discover and enjoy flavors from across the globe – 300 selections to be exact. Dinerscan enjoy pizza to omelets, sushi, teppanyaki, fresh carved meats and Asian barbecue, plus the buffet features live-action cooking right before your eyes, ensuring freshness and topquality.
Weekday lunch (Monday-Thursday) is $24.99, but on Saturdays and Sundays, the service is upgraded to a Champagne Brunch and is priced at $31.99. Monday through Thursday dinner is $32.99,while Friday through Sunday the price is $34.99.
Rio Casino News
Be sure to use the 2017 American CasinoGuide coupon for $5 off up to four guests at this buffet.
For seafood lovers all dinners can be upgraded, for a $20 fee, to get access to over 70 fresh seafood items, including endless oysters, crab legs and shrimp. There are also extra stationswith various fish dishes and other hard-to-find seafood offerings. Be sure to use the coupon from the 2017 American Casino Guide to receive $10off for up to four guests on the seafood buffet!
If you are looking for some entertainment, the Rio has many shows including magicians Penn & Teller, The Eddie Griffin Experience and two adult shows (Chippendales and +X-Rocks, atopless revue). There are also several bars and lounges such as the Voodoo rooftop nightclub.
![Rio Casino Review Rio Casino Review](https://the10bestreview.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/10.Colombia-football-team-2014.jpg)
The Rio also recently opened its Voodoo Zipline, which sends guests up to 400 feet in the air, offering great views of the Las Vegas Strip. The zipline costs $27.49 to ride and is opendaily from 11 am-11 pm. If heights are not your thing, you can also check out KISS Mini Golf which is open from 10 am to midnight daily and costs $11.95 for 18 holes.
To find out more information or make reservations at the Rio Suites Hotel & Casino, visit http://www.riolasvegas.com or call (866) 746-7671. You can also head over to our order now page to purchase the 2014 Guide including valuable coupons for the Rio!
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The Rio All-Suites Hotel and Casino, owned by Harrah's, is located just off the Vegas Strip. Although some prefer to be situated directly on the Strip, there is little to no inconvenience to staying at the Rio, as free shuttles run every fifteen minutes, dropping customers at either Paris, Caesar's, or Harrah's. The rides only take five minutes and run all day into the early morning hours.
The rooms at the Rio are spacious, with a large living area and plenty of room to spread out. However, the last few years have seen a slight decline in the appearance and upkeep of the Rio. The word on the street is that Harrah's is trying to sell the property, and it shows in a lack of attention to detail. The standard room is still equipped with a large rear-projection tv, rather than the flat screens that now occupy so many Vegas rooms. The complimentary soap and shampoo are still provided, but the mouthwash and toothpaste are not. Thin sheets cover the beds, with blankets available only on request. The room safe needed to be reprogrammed every time it was opened. Still, these are minor stains, and the Rio could quickly make them disappear with a little attentiveness.
The Rio features a long, winding casino floor, with many rows of slots broken into groups by four different sections of table games. The slots had plenty of availability, and were loose enough that one individual hit a $4000 jackpot on a quarter machine, then hit the same jackpot on the same machine again within an hour. (this might have been too loose for management; the machine was promptly roped off and disassembled). The tables had single-deck, double-deck, and full shoe versions of blackjack, roulette, pai-gow, let it ride, Hold’em, and craps. Action was brisk at the tables, even though Rio's table minimums started at mostly $25 for blackjack; only the single deck was as low as $15. Strip hotels, by comparison, had many $10 games, and the neighboring Gold Coast had $5 tables. Dealers were friendly and talkative, for the most part. The heaviest traffic seemed to be at the craps and blackjack tables. Pit bosses were open and relaxed, making players comfortable. Drink service was steady and attentive.
The sports book at the Rio is one of the town's best. Parimutuel enthusiasts won't want to ever leave, as the hotel makes it clear, both through service and posted signs, that the horse and dog players will receive the king's treatment; sports fans are just along for the ride. The rows of seats come each placed before a private desktop cubbyhole, perfect for reviewing forms, programs, and tout sheets, along with personal tvs,to watch one's race of choice. The expansive wall of televisions includes over a dozen large screen tvs on the left side featuring the biggest sports matchups; the right side holds as many screens again, on this side high-definition flat screens showing simulcasts of races around the world. The electronic tote board to the right is huge, easy to read, and contains all the sports plays one might want. Drink service here was the best in Vegas.
The Rio features several regular shows; Prince was the featured entertainer til recently. Now, the hotel is in a state of remodeling some restaurants and showrooms, and the entertainment is on a slightly smaller scale. Penn and Teller's magic act is featured nightly.
The food at the Rio is generally very good, with a variety of selections. Although the Seafood Buffet and the Twisted Kilt Pub were both closed for renovation until March, the World Carnival Buffet makes for an excellent meal. This buffet is not quite as elaborate nor as exotic as the Bellagio, but prime rib and snow crab are both well-prepared, along with items from Mexican, Chinese, Italian, and Japanese cuisine. Service was very friendly and prompt. The Rio also hosts the All-American Café, open from lunch until the wee hours and making some of the best burgers in town. The service was spotty in the front part of the café, with tables left unbussed for long periods and drinks left needing refills; but the back, more elegant room of the café had excellent service, with both superb seafood and steak choices. The king crab legs and the ribeye chop were both sensational.
The nightclub of note at the Rio is the Voodoo Lounge, fifty floors up with an adjoining steakhouse and an outdoor patio view of the Strip. Food at Voodoo was good, but overpriced for the ambiance of being with the 'beautiful people'; food as good or better could be had with better service at half the price at the steakhouse at the All-American Café. The nightclub certainly had its share of eye candy, though, and the 32 ounce Autralian lobster tail had to be seen to be believed.
The Rio also features an expansive pool, giant conference and meeting facilities (this is where the Main Event of the World Series of Poker is held), and a large retail area, as well as showcasing the Mardi Gras in the Sky show hourly, above the casino floor.
All in all, the Rio is an excellent mid-range hotel, with friendly staff and plenty of entertainment and dining choices. With a little attentive management, it could be even better.
Reviewed by Terry Goodwin, Senior Writer for casino reviews website, Casino Gambling Web.
The rooms at the Rio are spacious, with a large living area and plenty of room to spread out. However, the last few years have seen a slight decline in the appearance and upkeep of the Rio. The word on the street is that Harrah's is trying to sell the property, and it shows in a lack of attention to detail. The standard room is still equipped with a large rear-projection tv, rather than the flat screens that now occupy so many Vegas rooms. The complimentary soap and shampoo are still provided, but the mouthwash and toothpaste are not. Thin sheets cover the beds, with blankets available only on request. The room safe needed to be reprogrammed every time it was opened. Still, these are minor stains, and the Rio could quickly make them disappear with a little attentiveness.
The Rio features a long, winding casino floor, with many rows of slots broken into groups by four different sections of table games. The slots had plenty of availability, and were loose enough that one individual hit a $4000 jackpot on a quarter machine, then hit the same jackpot on the same machine again within an hour. (this might have been too loose for management; the machine was promptly roped off and disassembled). The tables had single-deck, double-deck, and full shoe versions of blackjack, roulette, pai-gow, let it ride, Hold’em, and craps. Action was brisk at the tables, even though Rio's table minimums started at mostly $25 for blackjack; only the single deck was as low as $15. Strip hotels, by comparison, had many $10 games, and the neighboring Gold Coast had $5 tables. Dealers were friendly and talkative, for the most part. The heaviest traffic seemed to be at the craps and blackjack tables. Pit bosses were open and relaxed, making players comfortable. Drink service was steady and attentive.
The sports book at the Rio is one of the town's best. Parimutuel enthusiasts won't want to ever leave, as the hotel makes it clear, both through service and posted signs, that the horse and dog players will receive the king's treatment; sports fans are just along for the ride. The rows of seats come each placed before a private desktop cubbyhole, perfect for reviewing forms, programs, and tout sheets, along with personal tvs,to watch one's race of choice. The expansive wall of televisions includes over a dozen large screen tvs on the left side featuring the biggest sports matchups; the right side holds as many screens again, on this side high-definition flat screens showing simulcasts of races around the world. The electronic tote board to the right is huge, easy to read, and contains all the sports plays one might want. Drink service here was the best in Vegas.
The Rio features several regular shows; Prince was the featured entertainer til recently. Now, the hotel is in a state of remodeling some restaurants and showrooms, and the entertainment is on a slightly smaller scale. Penn and Teller's magic act is featured nightly.
The food at the Rio is generally very good, with a variety of selections. Although the Seafood Buffet and the Twisted Kilt Pub were both closed for renovation until March, the World Carnival Buffet makes for an excellent meal. This buffet is not quite as elaborate nor as exotic as the Bellagio, but prime rib and snow crab are both well-prepared, along with items from Mexican, Chinese, Italian, and Japanese cuisine. Service was very friendly and prompt. The Rio also hosts the All-American Café, open from lunch until the wee hours and making some of the best burgers in town. The service was spotty in the front part of the café, with tables left unbussed for long periods and drinks left needing refills; but the back, more elegant room of the café had excellent service, with both superb seafood and steak choices. The king crab legs and the ribeye chop were both sensational.
The nightclub of note at the Rio is the Voodoo Lounge, fifty floors up with an adjoining steakhouse and an outdoor patio view of the Strip. Food at Voodoo was good, but overpriced for the ambiance of being with the 'beautiful people'; food as good or better could be had with better service at half the price at the steakhouse at the All-American Café. The nightclub certainly had its share of eye candy, though, and the 32 ounce Autralian lobster tail had to be seen to be believed.
The Rio also features an expansive pool, giant conference and meeting facilities (this is where the Main Event of the World Series of Poker is held), and a large retail area, as well as showcasing the Mardi Gras in the Sky show hourly, above the casino floor.
All in all, the Rio is an excellent mid-range hotel, with friendly staff and plenty of entertainment and dining choices. With a little attentive management, it could be even better.
Reviewed by Terry Goodwin, Senior Writer for casino reviews website, Casino Gambling Web.
Rio All Suite Hotel & Casino
3700 W. Flamingo Road
Las Vegas, NV 89103
General #: 866-746-7671
3700 W. Flamingo Road
Las Vegas, NV 89103
General #: 866-746-7671