Las Vegas (Illusion)
Detailed Involvements
Events with rich location context
The Las Vegas illusion is manifested through the neon cowgirl sign visible through the suite window; when revealed it transforms the room's context from private tragedy to public spectacle, indicting the hotel's tendency to turn human history into themed display.
Garish, blinding, performative — a carnival glow that feels obscene against the dead body.
Contextual backdrop that reframes the discovery as part of a constructed entertainment narrative rather than a genuine cityscape.
Symbolizes the hotel's cosmetic masking of abandonment and the commodification of memory.
Illusory exterior — visible but not physically accessible from inside the suite.
The Las Vegas illusion is the external, projected façade visible through the suite window — a neon, long-legged cowgirl sign that converts the suite's outside into a manufactured spectacle and provides jarring contrast with the inner preservation of a human corpse.
Dazzling and garish; an intrusive carnival glow that feels performative and incongruous with the suite's preserved morbidity.
Backdrop and thematic contrast that exposes the Royale's tendency to aestheticize and trivialize human loss.
Represents the seductive surface of spectacle that masks abandonment and moral decay.
The 'Las Vegas' illusion is exposed via the suite window: a blinding neon cowgirl sign that bathes the room in performative light. It operates as an external set-piece, a seductive, disorienting façade that reframes the suite's stagy interior as part of a larger manufactured tableau.
Blindingly gaudy and surreal; the neon light feels manufactured and accusatory against the otherwise clinical preservation.
Disorienting exterior façade; a visual clue that the hotel world is constructed and performative.
Symbolizes the seductive distractions that mask abandonment and the moral theatricality of the Royale's preservation.
A visual projection or exterior that the away team can view but not easily interact with from inside the suite.
The Vegas-themed illusion frames the scene with gaudy signage and retro glitz; its artificiality heightens the horror of entrapment when a casual question about a real-world car reveals that those trappings are superficial and imprisoning.
Garish and uncanny — bright, nostalgic neon that feels like décor rather than a living place.
Set dressing that amplifies the moral dissonance between appearance and reality, making character entrapment visually obvious.
Embodies false promise: glamour that masks abandonment and scripted cruelty.
Appears accessible but is functionally enclosed by the hotel's systems.
The Las Vegas (Royale Hotel Illusion) functions as the broader conceit of the scene: a compressed, artificial city motif that transforms personal tragedy into theatrical spectacle. In this moment the illusion's surface glitter highlights Vanessa's private ruin, making it public and accusatory.
Gaudy and accusatory — neon gaiety overlaying a sterility that intensifies emotional exposure.
Contextual backdrop that amplifies the moral and emotional stakes of the table's scripted cruelty.
Symbolizes the hotel's ability to convert human lives into entertainment and indictment; vestige of abandonment beneath veneer.
A curated environment open to guests but internally controlled; exits and external access are implied to be inaccessible.
Events at This Location
Everything that happens here
Data's sensors intensify their readout as Riker yanks the covers off a sleeping figure to reveal a long-decayed human skeleton. Data identifies the remains as a male who died 283 …
Inside Richey’s suite the away team moves from sterile curiosity to a wrenching revelation: Data confirms the buried figure is a human skeleton who died 283 years ago. Worf rips …
Riker and the away team uncover a mummified body in the hotel's bed and Data identifies it as human and deliberately preserved — dead for 283 years. A pale-blue spacesuit …
Data instructs a baffled Worf to 'mingle' and then quietly infiltrates a blackjack table to use casual conversation as an experiment. By questioning Texas about his car and origins, Data …
Data deliberately inserts himself at a blackjack table to test the Royale's social mechanics. He uses cold probability and direct questions to disrupt Texas’s comforting manipulations; the dealer’s impatience and …