REVIEW · OBSERVATION DECKS & TOWERS
Las Vegas: ROUGE Live Show at the STRAT Ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by The STRAT · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Las Vegas goes full showbiz seduction. At the STRAT, ROUGE Live turns one ticket into a high-gloss adult variety show with aerial thrills and big Vegas energy. It is a 1.5-hour night where the action happens right above your seat.
I like the way the show builds momentum, moving from aerial stunts to nonstop performer talent. The show also uses comedy to keep things fun, not just intense. One thing to consider: entry can be slow, and if you have a QR code you may need to swap it for a real ticket at the box office, so plan extra time.
In This Review
- Key Things You’ll Notice at ROUGE at the STRAT
- Where ROUGE Lives in Las Vegas: STRAT’s Big-Stage Setting
- Tickets, Timing, and Why the Price Makes Sense
- Arrival and Entry Rules: Bags, QR Codes, and Getting Seated
- The 90-Minute Show Flow: How the Night Plays Out
- Aerial Stunts and Physical Feats Above the Stage
- Comedy Breaks the Tension (and Keeps You Engaged)
- Costumes, Props, Video, and Stagecraft That Keep Moving
- The Sensual Side: What Adults Should Expect
- Seating and Your Best Strategy for a Smooth Night
- Who This Works Best For (and Who Should Skip It)
- Value Check: Is $72 a Smart Vegas Night?
- Should You Book ROUGE Live at the STRAT?
- FAQ
- How long is the ROUGE Live Show at the STRAT?
- What does my ticket include?
- Is ROUGE suitable for children?
- Are cameras or flash photography allowed during the show?
- What bag rules should I follow?
- Does the show include topless performances?
- Is the venue wheelchair accessible?
- If I cancel, do I get a refund?
Key Things You’ll Notice at ROUGE at the STRAT

- Aerial stunts high above the stage: live, in-the-air feats are a core part of the spectacle.
- 18 performers on stage: you get a full cast of acrobats, contortionists, comedians, and more.
- Adult performance format: some acts are fully clothed, while others are topless.
- Comedy woven into the routines: you’ll laugh along as the show teases and performs.
- Production tech does the heavy lifting: video, lighting, and sound help each scene land fast.
- Venue rules are strict: no cameras and bag limits can affect how you arrive.
Where ROUGE Lives in Las Vegas: STRAT’s Big-Stage Setting

The ROUGE show is staged at the STRAT, and that matters because it is built for spectacle. This is not a small, backstage-style revue. You are in a proper theater setup where performers can fly, twist, balance, and perform for an audience that expects a full production.
What I like about this kind of room is simple: the whole show is designed to keep you oriented. When performers are up high doing aerial work, the staging and lighting help you track what is happening without craning awkwardly. It is also easier to stay locked in when the production keeps moving scene to scene.
The vibe is clearly adult. Think sensual fantasy and teasing routines with a full production layer, not just a collection of separate acts. If you want a Vegas night that feels like a single continuous show, this format does that well.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Las Vegas
Tickets, Timing, and Why the Price Makes Sense

The ticket price is listed at $72 per person, with a total runtime of about 1.5 hours. In Vegas, that is usually in the ballpark of a professional, full-scale show. The value here comes from the variety and the production polish: it is not only one type of act.
You are paying for a packaged entertainment experience:
- Multiple disciplines (aerial, contortion, acrobatics, balancing)
- A large cast (18 performers)
- Stagecraft (costumes, music, props, scenery)
- Technical effects (video design, lighting, sound)
If you are building a short Vegas itinerary, a 90-minute block is also practical. You can plan dinner nearby and still have energy for an after-show stroll.
Arrival and Entry Rules: Bags, QR Codes, and Getting Seated

Before you even think about the show, get the logistics part right. The venue has clear rules that can slow people down if you show up unprepared.
Here is what to plan around:
- No cameras, video equipment, or flash photography during the performance.
- No backpacks allowed.
- Only small purses are permitted, up to 8 x 8 inches.
- Anything prohibited needs to be handled at the bell desk or returned to your room.
Then there is the QR code detail. One important heads-up from real-world experience: the show does not accept the QR code directly at the door. You need to exchange it at the box office for a ticket. That step can add time to your arrival.
If you want a smooth night, I’d arrive early enough to handle check-in and any QR exchange without stress. Even if the show schedule is fixed, your seat timing depends on how quickly the line moves.
The 90-Minute Show Flow: How the Night Plays Out
The ROUGE show is structured like a continuous adult fantasy, built out of multiple sets. You are not waiting around for long gaps between acts. Instead, the show moves from one performance beat to the next, each one with its own costume, music shift, and stage look.
You can expect:
- A cast of 18 performers working throughout the show
- A sequence of acts that includes dancers, acrobats, contortionists, balancing acts, and comedians
- Scenes that vary in how clothed the performers are, including some topless moments
- A “tease and please” tone that stays adult from start to finish
Even though the theme is sensual, the pace is what keeps it entertaining. The comedic routines help reset the energy. The aerial and acrobatics keep it visually impressive. The result is a show that feels like one coherent package, not scattered talent demonstrations.
Aerial Stunts and Physical Feats Above the Stage

The aerial work is one of the big reasons people buy tickets to ROUGE. The stunts happen high above the stage, so the show uses vertical space instead of only front-and-center acting.
This is where the production really earns its ticket price. When aerial performers work at height, it is not just about strength. It is about precision, timing, and control—especially when the stage lighting and music are cueing the moment. You get that Vegas “wow” factor without needing to leave your seat.
Alongside aerials, you also get acrobats and contortionists pushing physical limits. That combination matters because it gives you contrast:
- aerials show height and airborne control
- contortion shows flexibility and shape control
- acrobatics show strength and transitions
If you enjoy performance art that is physically demanding, this is where you will feel the most impressed.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Las Vegas
Comedy Breaks the Tension (and Keeps You Engaged)
A lot of adult shows lean hard into sensuality and forget to keep the audience comfortable. ROUGE adds comedians into the mix, and that makes a difference.
The comedy does two jobs:
- It relieves pressure after high-intensity acts.
- It keeps the audience feeling like a participant, not just a spectator.
Even if the overall theme is tease-heavy, the humor adds a wink. You are not stuck watching something serious the whole time. It is part of the show’s rhythm, and it helps the routines stay playful.
Costumes, Props, Video, and Stagecraft That Keep Moving

ROUGE is built like a full production, not just a stage lineup. You see it in the details: costumes, music, props, and scenery all shift between scenes. On top of that, the show uses cutting-edge video design, lighting, and sound to add scale.
This matters because adult revue shows can risk feeling repetitive if the tech is minimal. Here, the visual changes keep you focused and help each set feel like its own world. The lighting, in particular, helps emphasize different textures and silhouettes as performers move.
If you care about production value—how a show looks and sounds—this is a strong match. The show’s technical layer is doing real work, not just background noise.
The Sensual Side: What Adults Should Expect
This is an adult-only show, and it does not hide that fact. The theme is seduction and fantasy. Some performances are fully clothed. Other acts include topless moments.
That means you should go in with the right mindset. If you are comfortable with adult entertainment and want something flirtatious and bold, you’ll likely enjoy the show’s energy. If you are looking for something family-friendly or purely athletic with no sensual tone, this likely will not fit your taste.
Also, because there is a lot of teasing and adult humor, the audience atmosphere matters. This is not a quiet theater where you only watch. People are there to react—laugh, cheer, and take the show as a shared experience.
Seating and Your Best Strategy for a Smooth Night

You do not get a lot of flexibility once the show starts. So your best strategy is simple:
- Have your ticket sorted early (especially if you need to swap the QR code at the box office).
- Keep your bag plan tight so you do not lose time to venue rules.
- Arrive early enough that you can settle in before the first acts.
Once you are inside, the stage design and the aerial staging should make it easy to follow what is happening. The show is built so multiple performer styles can coexist without confusion.
And since the runtime is about 1.5 hours, you can treat it like your anchor event for the evening. Plan dinner before, not during. You want a calm start, not a rushed scramble.
Who This Works Best For (and Who Should Skip It)
ROUGE Live at the STRAT is best for adults who want a Vegas night that combines performance skill with adult humor and big-stage showcraft.
You’ll probably like it if:
- you enjoy circus-style athletic acts (aerial, contortion, acrobatics)
- you want a full production with costumes, lighting, video, and sound
- you are comfortable with sensual adult staging and topless moments
You might want to skip it if:
- you are traveling with kids (it is not suitable for anyone under 18)
- you want a strictly athletic show with no sensual theme
- you cannot follow venue rules about cameras and bag limits
If your goal is a fun, adult, high-energy show that stays in motion for 90 minutes, this fits.
Value Check: Is $72 a Smart Vegas Night?
At $72 per person, you are paying for a lot of elements in one package: a large cast, aerial work, comedy, and strong stage production. In other words, you’re not just buying a single performer or a bare-bones act.
The best way to judge value is to ask what you want from your Vegas time. If you want a night where:
- you get repeated “wow” moments (especially the aerial stunts)
- you get variety (different disciplines and comedic pacing)
- you get production polish (video, lighting, sound)
…then $72 feels reasonable. If you only care about one type of performance and the adult theme is a turn-off, you may find the price harder to justify.
For me, the value is strongest if you treat it as your main event for the evening. Build your plan around the show so the time and money feel intentional.
Should You Book ROUGE Live at the STRAT?
Book it if you want an adult Vegas show with real performance muscle—especially aerial stunts high above the stage—plus a cast that mixes physical talent with comedy. The 1.5-hour runtime is also a big plus for tight itineraries.
I would only hesitate if you dislike sensual adult entertainment or if you know you will arrive late and struggle with ticket exchange and entry rules. The biggest practical risk is not the show. It is the arrival process—QR exchange, bag limits, and check-in time.
If you plan your timing and you’re comfortable with the theme, this is a solid pick for a memorable Vegas night.
FAQ
How long is the ROUGE Live Show at the STRAT?
The show runs about 1.5 hours. You should check availability to see starting times.
What does my ticket include?
Your ticket includes admission to the ROUGE Live Show.
Is ROUGE suitable for children?
No. The show is not suitable for children under 18.
Are cameras or flash photography allowed during the show?
No. Cameras, video equipment, and flash photography are not allowed during the performance.
What bag rules should I follow?
No backpacks are allowed. Only small purses up to 8 x 8 inches are permitted. Larger prohibited items must be checked at the bell desk or returned to your room.
Does the show include topless performances?
Some performances are topless, while others are clothed.
Is the venue wheelchair accessible?
Yes. The show location is wheelchair accessible.
If I cancel, do I get a refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.


































