
Siem Reap
🇰🇭 Cambodia
Tourist traps to avoid in Siem Reap — skip the fake floating village and dinner shows
Listen up, night crawlers — Some Siem Reap 'experiences' are designed to separate tourists from their money, and I've seen enough travelers get burned to share the real intel from my after-dark investigations.
Chong Kneas floating village is a complete tourist circus. Those 'traditional performances' are staged for tour groups, boat rides cost $25 for mediocre photo ops, and the whole operation feels like a theme park. Instead, head to Kampong Phluk — A genuine floating village where 9-meter-high stilt houses adapt to seasonal flooding patterns that locals have navigated for generations. The boat ride through mangrove forests costs $15 and shows real community life, not manufactured culture.
Never buy temple passes from touts or hotel concierges. The official Angkor ticket office (Angkor Archaeological Park entrance, 5am-5:30pm) sells legitimate passes only. Those $5 'discounted' passes from street vendors are fakes that'll get you kicked out of temples and potentially banned from the entire complex. I've witnessed this disaster multiple times during late-night conversations with dejected travelers.
Skip dinner shows on Pub Street entirely. Overpriced food paired with amateur apsara dancing performed for drunk backpackers isn't culture — It's tourism theater. Real traditional performances happen at Phare Cambodian Circus (tickets $18-38) or during temple festivals. The energy at these authentic venues comes alive after sunset, when locals attend alongside respectful travelers who actually want to understand Khmer culture.
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