by Christina & Vincent
Coca-Cola Store & M&M's World Las Vegas: The Around the World Soda Flight
We tried all 16 sodas on the Coca-Cola Store's Around the World flight in Las Vegas: the Thailand Fanta won, Beverly was exactly as alarming as promised, and M&M's World had bulk candy for $10.
Watch on YouTube→Not everything in Las Vegas has to be a Michelin-starred tasting menu or a buffet with king crab. Sometimes you just want to spend an afternoon trying 16 sodas from around the world and buying way too much chocolate. This was that afternoon.
The Coca-Cola Store and M&M's World sit right next to each other on the Strip, and they are genuinely fun if you approach them the right way: not as a shopping trip, but as a sugar-fueled detour from everything else Vegas asks of you.
The "Around the World" Tray at the Coca-Cola Store
On the second floor of the Coca-Cola Store, the café offers a flight of 16 different sodas sourced from countries across the globe. You get a tray with small pours, work your way through them, and discover very quickly that soda preferences are not universal.
The range is wide. Some of these drinks are genuinely delicious. Others taste like something you would find at the back of a medicine cabinet. That contrast is exactly what makes it worth doing.
The Winners
Fanta Melon Frosty (Thailand): The best of the 16. Beautiful green color, perfectly sweet, and frosty in a way that makes you want another sip immediately. If you could buy this at a gas station in the US, you would.
Fanta Strawberry (Panama): The runner-up. Fruity and refreshing without tasting artificial, which is harder to pull off than it sounds in a soda. Clean finish.
Stoney Tangawizi (Tanzania): A strong ginger beer in the best way. This is not the mild ginger ale you put in a cocktail. The ginger hits you immediately and keeps going. If you like ginger, this is the most interesting drink on the tray.
The One Everyone Talks About
Beverly (Italy): Famously one of the most divisive sodas Coca-Cola has ever produced, and it earns that reputation. The first sip is intensely bitter with a tonic-like aftertaste that makes you wonder what went wrong. Interestingly, it does soften a little as you continue drinking it, but "it gets slightly less alarming" is not exactly a glowing endorsement. You have to try it, if only so you understand why everyone else warns you about it.
The tray is a good value for what you get: about an hour of entertainment, something to talk about, and a clear answer to the question of which countries are producing the best Coca-Cola products right now (Thailand, apparently).
The Stores Themselves
Coca-Cola Store
Multiple floors of merchandise covering every possible way to display a Coca-Cola logo. We found 3D-printed cups, recycled glassware, and decorative collectible bottles ranging up to $70. The $33 twenty-five-ounce collectible bottles are appealing but easy to walk past if you remind yourself that it is a soda bottle. The lower floors are worth a browse for smaller, more practical souvenirs.
M&M's World
Four floors, which is genuinely more floors than this concept probably needs, and somehow it works. The bulk M&M section is the move: we got about half a pound for around $10, which is a reasonable price for candy you can personalize by color or flavor. The Vegas-themed merchandise is better here than at most Strip tourist shops because the M&M's branding is actually charming rather than just slapping a casino logo on a mug.
If you are buying gifts to bring home from Vegas, M&M's World has options that feel more thoughtful than most.
Tips for Visiting
Do the Around the World tray first while your palate is fresh. After half a pound of M&M's, your ability to distinguish between the subtle flavor differences in the flight will be significantly reduced.
Budget carefully in the stores. It is easy to spend $50 to $100 without noticing because individual items seem reasonable until they add up. Set a number before you walk in.
Go in the afternoon. Both stores are air-conditioned, which makes them a genuinely pleasant escape from the Strip heat, and the afternoon crowds are more manageable than evenings.
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