Self Guided Mojave Desert Road Trip for Fallout Fans

4 to 5 hours (approximately)
Offered in: English

Experience the Mojave Desert like never before on this self-guided road trip designed for Fallout: New Vegas enthusiasts and desert explorers. With a 4x4 vehicle provided, you can explore at your own pace while following a curated route that highlights real Nevada landscapes and iconic landmarks. Enjoy the freedom of a private adventure without a guide, allowing you to immerse yourself in the authentic desert atmosphere.

- Drive through real desert towns and scenic wasteland-like landscapes
- Includes route support, directions, and local tips for easy navigation
- Perfect for gamers, photographers, and those seeking unique experiences
- Stop at iconic locations like Old Mormon fort and Pioneer Saloon for local flavor

What's Included

Bottled water
Air-conditioned vehicle
retro gaming equipment
Mojave route briefing at the Discover It Yourself office
Snacks
Fuel

Meeting and pickup

Meeting point

Meet at our office near the Las Vegas airport for your Mojave route briefing, vehicle walkthrough, and self-guided route notes. We’ll help you plan your route to real-world desert locations inspired by Fallout: New Vegas before you take the wheel and begin your private Mojave road trip.

End point
This activity ends back at the meeting point.

Itinerary

Duration: 4 to 5 hours (approximately)
  • 1
    Pioneer Saloon

    Begin your Mojave adventure in Goodsprings, a historic desert town with deep Old West character and major fan appeal for Fallout: New Vegas players. Visit Pioneer Saloon, one of Southern Nevada’s most iconic saloons, established in 1913 and known for its burgers, drinks, ghost-town atmosphere, and roadside history. This is a perfect place to take photos, grab food or a “Sunset Sarsaparilla”-inspired drink, and start feeling like you’ve stepped into your own Mojave campaign. Food and drinks are not included.

    40 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 2

    Visit one of the earliest historic sites in Las Vegas and a strong real-world starting point for understanding the desert crossroads that shaped the region. The Old Las Vegas Mormon Fort preserves the area’s early settlement history, when natural springs created a rare desert oasis used by Indigenous communities, travelers, traders, and later Mormon missionaries. For this route, it works as a “before the Strip” history stop — a reminder that Las Vegas began as water, trail routes, and survival in the desert long before neon.

    40 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 3

    Pass through Jean, a small desert highway outpost south of Las Vegas that helps set the tone for the Mojave route. This stop is less about a single attraction and more about atmosphere: open highway, desert flats, mountain backdrops, and that strange edge-of-civilization feeling that makes Southern Nevada feel cinematic. Depending on timing, Jean can work as a quick photo stop, route marker, or transition point toward Primm, Goodsprings, or deeper Mojave locations.

    15 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 4
    Primm

    Explore Primm, a remote casino-and-highway town near the Nevada–California border with a true Mojave roadside feel. With its desert setting, aging resort architecture, roller coaster skyline, and border-town energy, Primm adds a surreal wasteland atmosphere to the route. This stop is ideal for photos, fan-inspired comparison moments, and that classic “outpost on the edge of the desert” feeling before continuing deeper into the Mojave.

    20 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 5

    Make a quick stop or pass-by at a real Mojave solar-energy landmark that evokes the HELIOS One atmosphere from Fallout: New Vegas. This is not an official game location, but it gives fans a chance to connect the route’s real desert infrastructure with the game’s solar-power themes. Expect wide desert views, industrial solar scenery, and a fun fan-inspired photo moment along the route.

    5 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 6

    Visit Nipton, a remote Mojave Desert town with strong fan appeal and a quiet, far-outpost feeling. Originally tied to mining, ranching, rail traffic, and desert travel routes, Nipton gives the experience a deeper Mojave road-trip layer with open desert scenery, old structures, and off-the-grid atmosphere. Access and available services may vary, so this stop is best treated as a flexible route highlight rather than a guaranteed attraction experience.

    15 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 7

    Add a deeper-cut Mojave mining stop with the Goldome / Gold Dome Mine area, a remote desert location that brings more rugged mining history and abandoned-landscape energy into the route. This is best used as an optional advanced stop depending on timing, road conditions, vehicle suitability, and guest interest. Because access and conditions can vary, this stop should be treated as a flexible route option rather than a guaranteed attraction.

    30 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 8

    Cottonwood Cove adds a completely different layer to the Mojave route, trading dry desert highways for the blue-water contrast of Lake Mohave and the Colorado River corridor. This stop gives guests a remote outpost feeling with desert mountains, marina scenery, and a quieter side of the region far from the Strip. It is best suited for an extended route because of the added driving time, but it creates a strong visual payoff and a more complete Mojave road-trip experience.

    30 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 9

    Continue into Searchlight, a historic Southern Nevada mining town surrounded by open Mojave Desert, old roads, and rugged mountain scenery. Founded in the late 1890s around the Searchlight Mine, the town gives this route a deeper desert-history layer with gold-mining roots, highway outpost energy, and a quiet “middle of the wasteland” feeling that Fallout: New Vegas fans will appreciate. Searchlight works especially well as a transition stop between Nipton, Cottonwood Cove, Nelson, and the wider Mojave route. Depending on timing, guests can use it as a quick photo stop, rest stop, or optional history stop before continuing deeper into the desert. The local Searchlight Museum focuses on the history of this 100+ year-old community and its mining past.

    30 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 10
    Nelson Ghost Town

    Explore Nelson Ghost Town and Eldorado Canyon, one of the most photogenic old mining areas near Las Vegas. Located southeast of the city along Highway 165, this area is known for the Techatticup Mine, weathered vehicles, desert textures, old structures, and a strong abandoned-Mojave atmosphere. It is a great photo stop for guests who want mining history, ghost-town visuals, and a more cinematic desert backdrop. Any admission, mine tour, parking, or photography fees are not included.

    30 minutes Admission ticket free

Additional info

  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels
Supplied by Discover it Yourself

Tags

Day Trips
Half-day Tours
Private and Luxury
Private Sightseeing Tours
4WD Tours
Adventure Tours
Road Trip
Short term availability

Cancellation Policy

For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.

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