Location from Fallout by Interplay / Bethesda
Mr. House's sealed casino tower looming over the Strip — for 200 years no one entered, and the man inside played the longest game in the wasteland with a deck of Securitrons.
The Lucky 38 is quiet in a way casinos should never be — no chatter, no coins, no music. Just the soft whir of Securitron patrols and the distant hum of systems that have been running uninterrupted for two centuries. The air smells of old carpet and ozone from the electronics. House's penthouse is immaculate, his screens displaying real-time data feeds from every Securitron camera on the Strip. The view from the top floor is commanding — the entire Mojave spread out below, Hoover Dam visible on the horizon. House chose this tower for a reason. From here, he doesn't just watch the wasteland. He owns it.
A towering art-deco casino spire rising above the Strip, its distinctive spoked crown visible for miles across the Mojave. The exterior is weathered but structurally intact — House maintained it remotely. The ground floor casino is frozen in pre-War opulence: roulette tables under dust covers, slot machines dark and silent, a bar with bottles still on the shelves. Upper floors contain a presidential suite, a penthouse with panoramic windows overlooking the wasteland, and House's hidden chamber where his preserved body connects to the city's systems. Securitrons guard every level.
Also known as: Lucky 38, The Lucky 38 Casino, House's Tower