Galaxy Entertainment has teamed with Monaco’s Societe des Bains de Mer to bring the Cafe de Paris Monte Carlo bistro brand to Macau.
It’s the first foray into Asia for Cafe de Paris, which promises to provide an authentic French cafe experience, while serving a range of French and Asian specialities. The cafe will be in the Galaxy Macau resort.
“By introducing the flagship café of one of the world’s most celebrated hospitality brands from Monaco to Macau, locals and visitors will be spoilt for choice at Galaxy’s well-established café society,” Roger Lienhard, senior vice president of hospitality at Galaxy Macau said in a press release.
As well as Asian fare, such as Yangzhou fried rice, the cafe will serve traditional bistro fare, such as mussels in white wine and trout meuniere.
Galaxy has teamed with the European company to jointly bid for a casino license in Japan.
This Dossier results from the “Life After POGOs” editorial project by Asia Gaming Brief which culminated with a pop-up digital forum on 9th December to discuss potentials ramifications in the industry.
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The Madras High Court has declined to grant an interim stay on the Tamil Nadu government’s ordinance banning online gambling and games, including online rummy.
The Macau government’s intense marketing efforts in Mainland China appear to have borne fruit over the Christmas holiday season with hotels reaching an average occupancy rate of 70 percent.
Suncity Group Holdings says its Suntrust Home Developers unit has raised a total of PHP12.9 billion ($268.6 million) through the issue of convertible bonds to finance the development of an integrated resort in Manila.
Over the years, many of the answers have been remarkably prescient in their forecasts for the near-term direction of Asia’s gaming industry. However, we can safely say that no one came anywhere close to guessing
what 2020 may have had in store.
While nowhere in the world has escaped the economic fallout from the Covid-19 crisis, Macau has been hit harder than most, with forecasts for gross domestic product to shrink more than 50 percent this year.
Before the Covid-19 crisis, tourism in the Greater Mekong Sub-Region was at a record high, on track to welcome 80 million visitors in 2019, generating some $90 billion in revenue.