The Story

Born into the house that built the Strip.

Vincent Vegas inherited more than an empire. He inherited a question — what is all of it actually worth, and who pays the price for the spectacle?

01 — Two Inheritances

A name that lit up a city.

For three generations the Vegas family built and quietly held the rooms where Las Vegas performed itself — the casinos, the resorts, the late kitchens, the stages. Vincent grew up in two of those rooms at once: the gilded floor the guests were meant to see, and the corridor behind it where the work actually happened.

That contrast became his entire way of seeing. Power, he learned early, is most honest in how it treats the people who keep the lights on.

Vincent Vegas

“An empire is easy to inherit. It is far harder to deserve.”

02 — The Reluctant Heir

He did not return to preserve it. He returned to interrogate it.

After studying finance, behavioral economics and hospitality, Vincent spent years inside the business under nothing but his own initials — on the floor, in the kitchens, in the recovery rooms the brochures never mention. He took the chair in 2026 with a single conviction: a legacy is not a possession. It is an obligation that compounds.

Risk

Raised on the mathematics of chance, he separates the risk that builds something from the risk that quietly consumes the people exposed to it.

Responsibility

Wealth is a debt to the city that produced it. The people behind the experience should not be invisible to the people who profit from it.

Reinvention

The most valuable assets are often the ones written off — the businesses, and the people, that survived a collapse and built something sturdier.

Where the work happens.

Two instruments, one conviction — that capital and conscience are not opposites.