Asian-inspired speakeasy craft cocktails, Japanese whiskey & sake























"With red-tinted lanterns overhead and snug little corners perfect for lingering over Japanese whiskey, Here Kitty Kitty has an insider-y aura that makes you feel important just for being there. The speakeasy in the Resorts World food hall is a far cry from its exterior, a brightly lit sundry shop that sells newspapers and cherry blossom-flavor Kit Kats, with a bookcase that presses inwards towards the bar. Shake off the post-convention grind with a zippy One Night Stand, featuring strawberry-infused Don Julio Blanco and firewater bitters. Seated at a leather booth beneath dueling neon tigers, you can be smug about finding the coolest bar in the building." - Janna Karel

"A small newspaper stand inside the Famous Foods Street Eats food hall has one bookshelf that’s not like the others. Give it a push, and it gives way to the Tokyo Vice Den — an elegant pop-up, filled with Japanese-inspired décor and tasty themed beverages." - Janna Karel


"Mixologists from Las Vegas bars will host interactive seminars and cocktail tastings three times daily at Cocktail School. Each session of the free event will be hosted by mixologists from bars and lounges including Here Kitty Kitty." - Janna Karel

"Hidden inside a retail stall in Famous Foods Street Eats, Here Kitty Kitty is a secret speakeasy-style bar accessed through Ms. Meow’s Mamak Stall — no secret word needed — offering an intimate, tucked-away cocktail experience behind a shelf lined with lucky cat sculptures." - Eater Staff

"Tucked behind a shelf of lucky cat sculptures inside a retail shop, this intimate 800-square-foot cocktail den feels like a secret refuge where guests can pause or stay and imbibe with Mrs. Meow. The space features a bar with a library of glowing liquor bottles and a lounge that mixes traditional Chinese, industrial, and modern design elements—metal cocktail tables paired with hand-painted Chinese ottomans, neon tigers and a tiger mural on the walls, a traditional Chinese children’s poem in Mandarin, and worn Chinese advertisements. Vincent Celano of Celano Design Studio says the intent was to layer industrial features like wooden rafters and brick walls with cultural Chinese elements to create a rich, eclectic atmosphere. Cocktails range from $18 to $20 and include the Mezcal Meow, a Hurricane, and a Mai Tai; signature drinks called out include the Pink Kitty (Roku gin and white peach with sparkling white peach sake), the Mix & Matcha (Haku vodka with coconut lemongrass Nigori sake and matcha syrup), and the Berry Talkes (Belvedere blackberry lemongrass with Oolong tea). Sakes are available in cans up to large-format bottles, and bar snacks include a pu-pu platter, deviled eggs, poke chips, Vietnamese caramel-braised pork riblets, and an oyster shooter flight." - Susan Stapleton