700 Cities, One Question: What Do You Wanna Doo?
от James Johnson
27 ноября 2025 г.
Поделиться

700 Cities, One Question: What Do You Wanna Doo?
от James Johnson
27 ноября 2025 г.
Поделиться

700 Cities, One Question: What Do You Wanna Doo?
от James Johnson
27 ноября 2025 г.
Поделиться

700 Cities, One Question: What Do You Wanna Doo?
от James Johnson
27 ноября 2025 г.
Поделиться

Most travel platforms help you research. tickadoo actually books. That distinction matters when you're standing in a foreign city, phone dying, realising you should have sorted tickets three days ago. We built something different: an AI-powered platform that handles the entire journey from "I fancy seeing a show" to confirmed tickets in your inbox. Across 700+ cities, 50 languages, and more experiences than any single human could explore in a lifetime.
This is what's actually available when you stop scrolling and start booking.
London: Where tickadoo Started
The West End remains the world's greatest concentration of theatrical talent, and it's where tickadoo cut its teeth. Forty productions running every night, from Les Miserables (for over 40 years) to Hamilton to Wicked to whatever just opened last month.
But London isn't just theatre. Warner Bros. Studio Tour for Harry Potter fans who need to see the actual Great Hall. Tower of London for Crown Jewels and a thousand years of occasionally gruesome history. London Eye for the skyline view that makes sense of the city below. Stonehenge day trips for when ancient mysteries call.
The West End taught us what booking should feel like. Then we took that everywhere else.
New York: Broadway and Beyond
Broadway needs no introduction. The Lion King has been stopping traffic in Times Square since 1997. Wicked turned green skin into box office gold. Hamilton rewrote what musical theatre could be. These shows define New York as much as the skyline does.
Beyond the theatre district: Empire State Building for the classic observation deck experience. Statue of Liberty because some icons demand to be seen in person. 9/11 Memorial for the history that still shapes the city. Brooklyn food tours for pizza arguments and bagel debates conducted by actual New Yorkers.
New York moves fast. Your booking platform should keep up.
Paris: Romance, Art, and Standing in Fewer Queues
The Louvre contains 380,000 objects. You have one afternoon. Skip-the-line tickets aren't a luxury - they're basic logistics for anyone who wants to see the Mona Lisa without losing the will to live in a two-hour queue.
Eiffel Tower access determines whether you spend your evening watching sunset over Paris or watching other tourists watch sunset over Paris. Moulin Rouge cabaret delivers the can-can, champagne, and spectacle that's defined Montmartre for over a century. Versailles day trips reveal what happens when French royalty decides to build a house.
Seine river cruises, Musee d'Orsay, catacombs tours through tunnels lined with six million skeletons. Paris rewards the prepared.
Barcelona: Gaudi, Beaches, and Booking Nightmares Solved
Here's a Barcelona truth: Sagrada Familia tickets sell out weeks ahead. Park Guell implemented timed entry because too many people showed up at once. Casa Batllo and Casa Mila require advance booking during peak season. The city's most famous attractions have capacity limits that catch unprepared tourists constantly.
tickadoo exists for exactly this problem. Sagrada Familia tickets with confirmed time slots. Camp Nou tours for football pilgrims. Flamenco shows in Gothic Quarter venues where the art form actually lives. Montserrat day trips to the mountain monastery that's drawn visitors for a thousand years.
Barcelona is glorious. Barcelona planning is administrative hell. We handle the second part.
Las Vegas: Shows, Experiences, and Controlled Chaos
Vegas invented the residency show and never looked back. World-class performers - names you'd recognise instantly - playing intimate venues every night. Cirque du Soleil in multiple productions across the Strip. Magic shows, comedy shows, concerts, and productions that could only exist in a city this committed to spectacle.
Grand Canyon tours by helicopter, bus, or private vehicle. Hoover Dam for engineering appreciation. High Roller observation wheel for Strip views. Vegas experiences range from the sublime to the ridiculous, often in the same afternoon.
The house always wins, but at least your tickets are confirmed.
Amsterdam: Culture That Goes Beyond Coffee Shops
Van Gogh Museum holds the world's largest collection of his work. Anne Frank House remains one of Europe's most moving historical sites - and one of its hardest tickets to secure. Rijksmuseum contains Rembrandt's Night Watch and centuries of Dutch Golden Age mastery.
Canal cruises reveal why the city is built on water. Heineken Experience for brewery history and beer. Day trips to Zaanse Schans windmills and Keukenhof tulip gardens (seasonal, spectacular, absolutely packed without advance booking).
Amsterdam fits more into its compact centre than cities three times its size. Book ahead or spend your visit looking at "sold out" signs.
Dubai: Superlatives as Standard
The world's tallest building. The world's largest mall. The world's most determined attempt to build a global city from scratch in thirty years. Burj Khalifa observation decks at sunset sell out fast for good reason - that view defines modern Dubai.
Desert safaris with dune bashing and Bedouin camps. Dubai Frame for the skyline perspective that makes architectural ambition tangible. Aquaventure water park for when the desert heat demands swimming. Dhow dinner cruises on the Creek where the old city still breathes.
Dubai built itself for visitors. tickadoo makes sure you actually get into what you came to see.
Rome: Eternal City, Eternal Queues (Unless You Plan)
Colosseum tickets with arena floor access. Vatican Museums skip-the-line entry that saves literal hours. Sistine Chapel without the crushing crowds of midday walk-ups. Rome contains two thousand years of history - spending three of your precious hours in ticket queues is a tragedy.
Borghese Gallery limits visitors strictly, making advance booking mandatory not optional. Pompeii day trips to the city frozen in volcanic ash. Food tours through Trastevere and Testaccio where Romans actually eat.
Every tourist wants to see Rome. tickadoo helps you actually see it instead of waiting to see it.
Beyond the Obvious: 700 Cities Means 700 Cities
The big destinations get the attention. But tickadoo reaches everywhere travellers actually go.
Edinburgh for Fringe Festival tickets and castle tours. Vienna for opera and Schonbrunn Palace. Prague for castle complexes and beer experiences. Lisbon for fado shows and Sintra day trips. Athens for Acropolis access and island ferries. Tokyo for teamLab immersive art and Shibuya chaos. Sydney for Opera House tours and harbour adventures.
Each city has its own booking headaches. Popular attractions with limited capacity. Shows that sell out to locals before tourists hear about them. Experiences that require navigating local language websites. tickadoo handles all of it in 50 languages with one consistent interface.
What Actually Gets Booked on tickadoo
Theatre tickets remain the core. West End, Broadway, touring productions across Europe, Asia, Australia. From Phantom of the Opera in London to The Book of Mormon in New York to local productions in cities most platforms ignore entirely.
Attractions and landmarks follow. The Eiffel Towers and Colosseums that define city skylines, plus the smaller museums and galleries that locals actually love. Skip-the-line access where queues would otherwise destroy your day.
Tours and day trips round it out. Food tours led by people who actually know where to eat. Day trips to Stonehenge, Versailles, the Grand Canyon - the excursions that require logistics beyond "show up and figure it out." Walking tours, bike tours, boat tours, helicopter tours for cities that reward aerial perspectives.
Experiences that don't fit neat categories. Cooking classes in Rome. Flamenco in Seville. Wine tasting in Napa. Hot air balloons over Cappadocia. The things you do once and remember forever.
The tickadoo Difference
Other platforms show you options. tickadoo completes bookings.
The AI doesn't just recommend - it handles the actual transaction across supplier systems in dozens of countries. Ask "I need Hamilton tickets for Saturday" and the booking happens. No redirects to external sites, no starting the search again on a different platform, no discovering at checkout that the tickets aren't actually available.
One conversation. One confirmation. Done.
This matters most when planning gets complicated. Multiple cities, multiple attractions, coordinating dates and times and group sizes. The kind of trip planning that traditionally requires spreadsheets and seventeen browser tabs. tickadoo condenses that into actual conversation.
What Do You Wanna Doo?
That question started as a tagline. It became a genuine philosophy.
Travel booking shouldn't require expertise. The family booking their first West End show deserves the same smooth experience as the theatre obsessive who sees everything. The first-time Paris visitor shouldn't need to know which museum requires booking three weeks ahead and which accepts walk-ups.
700+ cities. 50 languages. Theatre, attractions, tours, and experiences that range from world-famous to locally beloved. All bookable through one platform that actually understands what you're asking for.
tickadoo exists because booking should be the easy part. The experience itself - standing in the West End as the lights dim, watching sunset from the Eiffel Tower, finally seeing the art you've only known from photographs - that's what matters.
So: WHAT DO YOU WANNA DOO?
Start exploring at tickadoo.com and find out what's possible…
Most travel platforms help you research. tickadoo actually books. That distinction matters when you're standing in a foreign city, phone dying, realising you should have sorted tickets three days ago. We built something different: an AI-powered platform that handles the entire journey from "I fancy seeing a show" to confirmed tickets in your inbox. Across 700+ cities, 50 languages, and more experiences than any single human could explore in a lifetime.
This is what's actually available when you stop scrolling and start booking.
London: Where tickadoo Started
The West End remains the world's greatest concentration of theatrical talent, and it's where tickadoo cut its teeth. Forty productions running every night, from Les Miserables (for over 40 years) to Hamilton to Wicked to whatever just opened last month.
But London isn't just theatre. Warner Bros. Studio Tour for Harry Potter fans who need to see the actual Great Hall. Tower of London for Crown Jewels and a thousand years of occasionally gruesome history. London Eye for the skyline view that makes sense of the city below. Stonehenge day trips for when ancient mysteries call.
The West End taught us what booking should feel like. Then we took that everywhere else.
New York: Broadway and Beyond
Broadway needs no introduction. The Lion King has been stopping traffic in Times Square since 1997. Wicked turned green skin into box office gold. Hamilton rewrote what musical theatre could be. These shows define New York as much as the skyline does.
Beyond the theatre district: Empire State Building for the classic observation deck experience. Statue of Liberty because some icons demand to be seen in person. 9/11 Memorial for the history that still shapes the city. Brooklyn food tours for pizza arguments and bagel debates conducted by actual New Yorkers.
New York moves fast. Your booking platform should keep up.
Paris: Romance, Art, and Standing in Fewer Queues
The Louvre contains 380,000 objects. You have one afternoon. Skip-the-line tickets aren't a luxury - they're basic logistics for anyone who wants to see the Mona Lisa without losing the will to live in a two-hour queue.
Eiffel Tower access determines whether you spend your evening watching sunset over Paris or watching other tourists watch sunset over Paris. Moulin Rouge cabaret delivers the can-can, champagne, and spectacle that's defined Montmartre for over a century. Versailles day trips reveal what happens when French royalty decides to build a house.
Seine river cruises, Musee d'Orsay, catacombs tours through tunnels lined with six million skeletons. Paris rewards the prepared.
Barcelona: Gaudi, Beaches, and Booking Nightmares Solved
Here's a Barcelona truth: Sagrada Familia tickets sell out weeks ahead. Park Guell implemented timed entry because too many people showed up at once. Casa Batllo and Casa Mila require advance booking during peak season. The city's most famous attractions have capacity limits that catch unprepared tourists constantly.
tickadoo exists for exactly this problem. Sagrada Familia tickets with confirmed time slots. Camp Nou tours for football pilgrims. Flamenco shows in Gothic Quarter venues where the art form actually lives. Montserrat day trips to the mountain monastery that's drawn visitors for a thousand years.
Barcelona is glorious. Barcelona planning is administrative hell. We handle the second part.
Las Vegas: Shows, Experiences, and Controlled Chaos
Vegas invented the residency show and never looked back. World-class performers - names you'd recognise instantly - playing intimate venues every night. Cirque du Soleil in multiple productions across the Strip. Magic shows, comedy shows, concerts, and productions that could only exist in a city this committed to spectacle.
Grand Canyon tours by helicopter, bus, or private vehicle. Hoover Dam for engineering appreciation. High Roller observation wheel for Strip views. Vegas experiences range from the sublime to the ridiculous, often in the same afternoon.
The house always wins, but at least your tickets are confirmed.
Amsterdam: Culture That Goes Beyond Coffee Shops
Van Gogh Museum holds the world's largest collection of his work. Anne Frank House remains one of Europe's most moving historical sites - and one of its hardest tickets to secure. Rijksmuseum contains Rembrandt's Night Watch and centuries of Dutch Golden Age mastery.
Canal cruises reveal why the city is built on water. Heineken Experience for brewery history and beer. Day trips to Zaanse Schans windmills and Keukenhof tulip gardens (seasonal, spectacular, absolutely packed without advance booking).
Amsterdam fits more into its compact centre than cities three times its size. Book ahead or spend your visit looking at "sold out" signs.
Dubai: Superlatives as Standard
The world's tallest building. The world's largest mall. The world's most determined attempt to build a global city from scratch in thirty years. Burj Khalifa observation decks at sunset sell out fast for good reason - that view defines modern Dubai.
Desert safaris with dune bashing and Bedouin camps. Dubai Frame for the skyline perspective that makes architectural ambition tangible. Aquaventure water park for when the desert heat demands swimming. Dhow dinner cruises on the Creek where the old city still breathes.
Dubai built itself for visitors. tickadoo makes sure you actually get into what you came to see.
Rome: Eternal City, Eternal Queues (Unless You Plan)
Colosseum tickets with arena floor access. Vatican Museums skip-the-line entry that saves literal hours. Sistine Chapel without the crushing crowds of midday walk-ups. Rome contains two thousand years of history - spending three of your precious hours in ticket queues is a tragedy.
Borghese Gallery limits visitors strictly, making advance booking mandatory not optional. Pompeii day trips to the city frozen in volcanic ash. Food tours through Trastevere and Testaccio where Romans actually eat.
Every tourist wants to see Rome. tickadoo helps you actually see it instead of waiting to see it.
Beyond the Obvious: 700 Cities Means 700 Cities
The big destinations get the attention. But tickadoo reaches everywhere travellers actually go.
Edinburgh for Fringe Festival tickets and castle tours. Vienna for opera and Schonbrunn Palace. Prague for castle complexes and beer experiences. Lisbon for fado shows and Sintra day trips. Athens for Acropolis access and island ferries. Tokyo for teamLab immersive art and Shibuya chaos. Sydney for Opera House tours and harbour adventures.
Each city has its own booking headaches. Popular attractions with limited capacity. Shows that sell out to locals before tourists hear about them. Experiences that require navigating local language websites. tickadoo handles all of it in 50 languages with one consistent interface.
What Actually Gets Booked on tickadoo
Theatre tickets remain the core. West End, Broadway, touring productions across Europe, Asia, Australia. From Phantom of the Opera in London to The Book of Mormon in New York to local productions in cities most platforms ignore entirely.
Attractions and landmarks follow. The Eiffel Towers and Colosseums that define city skylines, plus the smaller museums and galleries that locals actually love. Skip-the-line access where queues would otherwise destroy your day.
Tours and day trips round it out. Food tours led by people who actually know where to eat. Day trips to Stonehenge, Versailles, the Grand Canyon - the excursions that require logistics beyond "show up and figure it out." Walking tours, bike tours, boat tours, helicopter tours for cities that reward aerial perspectives.
Experiences that don't fit neat categories. Cooking classes in Rome. Flamenco in Seville. Wine tasting in Napa. Hot air balloons over Cappadocia. The things you do once and remember forever.
The tickadoo Difference
Other platforms show you options. tickadoo completes bookings.
The AI doesn't just recommend - it handles the actual transaction across supplier systems in dozens of countries. Ask "I need Hamilton tickets for Saturday" and the booking happens. No redirects to external sites, no starting the search again on a different platform, no discovering at checkout that the tickets aren't actually available.
One conversation. One confirmation. Done.
This matters most when planning gets complicated. Multiple cities, multiple attractions, coordinating dates and times and group sizes. The kind of trip planning that traditionally requires spreadsheets and seventeen browser tabs. tickadoo condenses that into actual conversation.
What Do You Wanna Doo?
That question started as a tagline. It became a genuine philosophy.
Travel booking shouldn't require expertise. The family booking their first West End show deserves the same smooth experience as the theatre obsessive who sees everything. The first-time Paris visitor shouldn't need to know which museum requires booking three weeks ahead and which accepts walk-ups.
700+ cities. 50 languages. Theatre, attractions, tours, and experiences that range from world-famous to locally beloved. All bookable through one platform that actually understands what you're asking for.
tickadoo exists because booking should be the easy part. The experience itself - standing in the West End as the lights dim, watching sunset from the Eiffel Tower, finally seeing the art you've only known from photographs - that's what matters.
So: WHAT DO YOU WANNA DOO?
Start exploring at tickadoo.com and find out what's possible…
Most travel platforms help you research. tickadoo actually books. That distinction matters when you're standing in a foreign city, phone dying, realising you should have sorted tickets three days ago. We built something different: an AI-powered platform that handles the entire journey from "I fancy seeing a show" to confirmed tickets in your inbox. Across 700+ cities, 50 languages, and more experiences than any single human could explore in a lifetime.
This is what's actually available when you stop scrolling and start booking.
London: Where tickadoo Started
The West End remains the world's greatest concentration of theatrical talent, and it's where tickadoo cut its teeth. Forty productions running every night, from Les Miserables (for over 40 years) to Hamilton to Wicked to whatever just opened last month.
But London isn't just theatre. Warner Bros. Studio Tour for Harry Potter fans who need to see the actual Great Hall. Tower of London for Crown Jewels and a thousand years of occasionally gruesome history. London Eye for the skyline view that makes sense of the city below. Stonehenge day trips for when ancient mysteries call.
The West End taught us what booking should feel like. Then we took that everywhere else.
New York: Broadway and Beyond
Broadway needs no introduction. The Lion King has been stopping traffic in Times Square since 1997. Wicked turned green skin into box office gold. Hamilton rewrote what musical theatre could be. These shows define New York as much as the skyline does.
Beyond the theatre district: Empire State Building for the classic observation deck experience. Statue of Liberty because some icons demand to be seen in person. 9/11 Memorial for the history that still shapes the city. Brooklyn food tours for pizza arguments and bagel debates conducted by actual New Yorkers.
New York moves fast. Your booking platform should keep up.
Paris: Romance, Art, and Standing in Fewer Queues
The Louvre contains 380,000 objects. You have one afternoon. Skip-the-line tickets aren't a luxury - they're basic logistics for anyone who wants to see the Mona Lisa without losing the will to live in a two-hour queue.
Eiffel Tower access determines whether you spend your evening watching sunset over Paris or watching other tourists watch sunset over Paris. Moulin Rouge cabaret delivers the can-can, champagne, and spectacle that's defined Montmartre for over a century. Versailles day trips reveal what happens when French royalty decides to build a house.
Seine river cruises, Musee d'Orsay, catacombs tours through tunnels lined with six million skeletons. Paris rewards the prepared.
Barcelona: Gaudi, Beaches, and Booking Nightmares Solved
Here's a Barcelona truth: Sagrada Familia tickets sell out weeks ahead. Park Guell implemented timed entry because too many people showed up at once. Casa Batllo and Casa Mila require advance booking during peak season. The city's most famous attractions have capacity limits that catch unprepared tourists constantly.
tickadoo exists for exactly this problem. Sagrada Familia tickets with confirmed time slots. Camp Nou tours for football pilgrims. Flamenco shows in Gothic Quarter venues where the art form actually lives. Montserrat day trips to the mountain monastery that's drawn visitors for a thousand years.
Barcelona is glorious. Barcelona planning is administrative hell. We handle the second part.
Las Vegas: Shows, Experiences, and Controlled Chaos
Vegas invented the residency show and never looked back. World-class performers - names you'd recognise instantly - playing intimate venues every night. Cirque du Soleil in multiple productions across the Strip. Magic shows, comedy shows, concerts, and productions that could only exist in a city this committed to spectacle.
Grand Canyon tours by helicopter, bus, or private vehicle. Hoover Dam for engineering appreciation. High Roller observation wheel for Strip views. Vegas experiences range from the sublime to the ridiculous, often in the same afternoon.
The house always wins, but at least your tickets are confirmed.
Amsterdam: Culture That Goes Beyond Coffee Shops
Van Gogh Museum holds the world's largest collection of his work. Anne Frank House remains one of Europe's most moving historical sites - and one of its hardest tickets to secure. Rijksmuseum contains Rembrandt's Night Watch and centuries of Dutch Golden Age mastery.
Canal cruises reveal why the city is built on water. Heineken Experience for brewery history and beer. Day trips to Zaanse Schans windmills and Keukenhof tulip gardens (seasonal, spectacular, absolutely packed without advance booking).
Amsterdam fits more into its compact centre than cities three times its size. Book ahead or spend your visit looking at "sold out" signs.
Dubai: Superlatives as Standard
The world's tallest building. The world's largest mall. The world's most determined attempt to build a global city from scratch in thirty years. Burj Khalifa observation decks at sunset sell out fast for good reason - that view defines modern Dubai.
Desert safaris with dune bashing and Bedouin camps. Dubai Frame for the skyline perspective that makes architectural ambition tangible. Aquaventure water park for when the desert heat demands swimming. Dhow dinner cruises on the Creek where the old city still breathes.
Dubai built itself for visitors. tickadoo makes sure you actually get into what you came to see.
Rome: Eternal City, Eternal Queues (Unless You Plan)
Colosseum tickets with arena floor access. Vatican Museums skip-the-line entry that saves literal hours. Sistine Chapel without the crushing crowds of midday walk-ups. Rome contains two thousand years of history - spending three of your precious hours in ticket queues is a tragedy.
Borghese Gallery limits visitors strictly, making advance booking mandatory not optional. Pompeii day trips to the city frozen in volcanic ash. Food tours through Trastevere and Testaccio where Romans actually eat.
Every tourist wants to see Rome. tickadoo helps you actually see it instead of waiting to see it.
Beyond the Obvious: 700 Cities Means 700 Cities
The big destinations get the attention. But tickadoo reaches everywhere travellers actually go.
Edinburgh for Fringe Festival tickets and castle tours. Vienna for opera and Schonbrunn Palace. Prague for castle complexes and beer experiences. Lisbon for fado shows and Sintra day trips. Athens for Acropolis access and island ferries. Tokyo for teamLab immersive art and Shibuya chaos. Sydney for Opera House tours and harbour adventures.
Each city has its own booking headaches. Popular attractions with limited capacity. Shows that sell out to locals before tourists hear about them. Experiences that require navigating local language websites. tickadoo handles all of it in 50 languages with one consistent interface.
What Actually Gets Booked on tickadoo
Theatre tickets remain the core. West End, Broadway, touring productions across Europe, Asia, Australia. From Phantom of the Opera in London to The Book of Mormon in New York to local productions in cities most platforms ignore entirely.
Attractions and landmarks follow. The Eiffel Towers and Colosseums that define city skylines, plus the smaller museums and galleries that locals actually love. Skip-the-line access where queues would otherwise destroy your day.
Tours and day trips round it out. Food tours led by people who actually know where to eat. Day trips to Stonehenge, Versailles, the Grand Canyon - the excursions that require logistics beyond "show up and figure it out." Walking tours, bike tours, boat tours, helicopter tours for cities that reward aerial perspectives.
Experiences that don't fit neat categories. Cooking classes in Rome. Flamenco in Seville. Wine tasting in Napa. Hot air balloons over Cappadocia. The things you do once and remember forever.
The tickadoo Difference
Other platforms show you options. tickadoo completes bookings.
The AI doesn't just recommend - it handles the actual transaction across supplier systems in dozens of countries. Ask "I need Hamilton tickets for Saturday" and the booking happens. No redirects to external sites, no starting the search again on a different platform, no discovering at checkout that the tickets aren't actually available.
One conversation. One confirmation. Done.
This matters most when planning gets complicated. Multiple cities, multiple attractions, coordinating dates and times and group sizes. The kind of trip planning that traditionally requires spreadsheets and seventeen browser tabs. tickadoo condenses that into actual conversation.
What Do You Wanna Doo?
That question started as a tagline. It became a genuine philosophy.
Travel booking shouldn't require expertise. The family booking their first West End show deserves the same smooth experience as the theatre obsessive who sees everything. The first-time Paris visitor shouldn't need to know which museum requires booking three weeks ahead and which accepts walk-ups.
700+ cities. 50 languages. Theatre, attractions, tours, and experiences that range from world-famous to locally beloved. All bookable through one platform that actually understands what you're asking for.
tickadoo exists because booking should be the easy part. The experience itself - standing in the West End as the lights dim, watching sunset from the Eiffel Tower, finally seeing the art you've only known from photographs - that's what matters.
So: WHAT DO YOU WANNA DOO?
Start exploring at tickadoo.com and find out what's possible…
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