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  2. City of Dreams (casino) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_Dreams_(casino)

    City of Dreams (Chinese: 新濠天地, Portuguese: Cidade dos Sonhos) is a casino resort in Cotai, Macau, SAR of People's Republic of China. Built, owned and managed by Melco Resorts & Entertainment, the resort, also known as CoD or CoD Macau, opened on 1 June 2009. [3][4] Described as a "mega-casino" by The Guardian, [5] in 2020 City of Dreams ...

  3. Melco Resorts & Entertainment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melco_Resorts_&_Entertainment

    Melco Resorts owns a number of integrated casino resorts, having launched Altira Macau in 2007, City of Dreams Macau in 2009, [2] City of Dreams Manila in 2015, [8] Studio City Macau in 2015 and City of Dreams Mediterranean in 2021, the largest casino-resort in Europe. [9] It also operates the Mocha Clubs slot machine brand. [2]

  4. Morpheus (hotel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morpheus_(hotel)

    Morpheus is a neo-futurist luxury hotel in Macau, Special administrative regions of China that is operated by Melco Resorts & Entertainment. [2] Opened in June 2018, TIME describes it as "the world’s first free-form exoskeleton-bound high-rise: a grid of steel envelops 40 stories of glass with a fluidity inspired by Chinese jade carving."

  5. Cotai Strip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cotai_Strip

    Cotai Strip 2014. The Cotai Strip is a term coined by the American company Las Vegas Sands Corporation, referring to its construction of a strip of hotel-casinos in the Cotai section of Macau, a special administrative region of the People's Republic of China. The Cotai Strip was built upon a 5.2 square kilometer land reclamation site in the ...

  6. The Venetian Macao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Venetian_Macao

    The Venetian Macao (Chinese: 澳門威尼斯人), is a hotel and casino resort in Macau, China owned by the American Las Vegas Sands company. The 39-story [1] structure on Macau's Cotai Strip has 10,500,000-square-foot (980,000 m 2) of floor space, and is modeled on its sister casino resort The Venetian Las Vegas. It is the largest casino in ...

  7. Gambling in Macau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gambling_in_Macau

    Gambling in Macau has been legal since the 1850s when the Portuguese government legalised the activity in the autonomous colony. Since then, Macau has become known worldwide as the "Gambling capital of the world". [1][2] It is the only place in China where casino gambling is legal. Gambling tourism is Macau's biggest source of revenue, making ...