Fly LINQ Las Vegas Attraction
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Las Vegas hides a secret above the rooftops — a 114-foot launch tower where the city's noise fades for one suspended breath before you rocket across The LINQ Promenade at 35mph. Few experiences reframe the Strip quite like this one.
Las Vegas doesn't exactly advertise itself as a city built for the sky. Ground level pulls you in every direction — neon signs, casino floors, crowds spilling onto the sidewalk. But climb to the top of Fly LINQ's 114-foot launch tower, and something unexpected happens: the Strip quiets down below you, and for one disorienting moment, you see it clearly.
From that tower perch above Las Vegas Boulevard, the geometry of the city reveals itself in a way no observation deck quite captures — because you're not staying still. The ride positions you in a seated harness rather than the prone flying position common to other ziplines, which means your eyes stay forward and open as you accelerate to speeds up to 35mph across the length of The LINQ Promenade. The roughly 12-story descent isn't just about speed; it's a corridor ride through one of Las Vegas's most active outdoor entertainment districts, with the glittering arc of the High Roller waiting at the far end as your landing zone. That wheel — the tallest observation wheel in the world — frames the finish in a way that feels almost cinematic.
What makes Fly LINQ genuinely surprising isn't the statistics, though they hold up. It's the odd intimacy of moving fast through open air in a city designed to keep you inside and sedentary. The experience strips away the casinos, the carpets, the carefully controlled climate — and leaves you briefly, gloriously exposed to Las Vegas as a physical place, wind and light and altitude all at once. For anyone who's ever felt like they wanted to see the Strip from a completely different angle, this is the most literal way to do exactly that.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's it actually like to ride Fly LINQ above the Strip — is the seated position weird?
Unlike ziplines where you fly face-down, Fly LINQ positions riders upright in a seated harness, which keeps your eyes level with the surrounding skyline rather than staring at the ground. That posture changes everything — you're watching the Promenade unfold ahead of you as the High Roller grows larger, making it feel more like a front-row flight than a freefall.
Is Fly LINQ a good fit for someone who isn't a hardcore thrill-seeker?
It occupies a sweet spot between a scenic ride and a proper adrenaline rush. The speed and height are real, but the experience is short and structured — no climbing, no dangling, no surprises beyond what you sign up for. People who'd hesitate at a roller coaster often find it manageable, especially because the seated harness feels more secure than hanging by your hands.
How long does the whole Fly LINQ experience take, and is there much waiting around?
The zipline ride itself lasts under a minute, but factor in check-in, gearing up, and the climb to the launch tower — plan for roughly 30 to 45 minutes total. The launch tower sits at the Las Vegas Boulevard end of The LINQ Promenade, so it's easy to combine with a High Roller ride or dinner along the same outdoor stretch without making a separate trip.
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