So the place is definately unique - there are many rooms with many similar, but different vibes - A+ for design and decor.
The staff seems really lost especially at the host stand. They had plenty of people working at the host stand... maybe too many, because there was no direction. We checked in twice (with a reservation) before they figured out what to do. We were brought upstairs to another host stand, where we waited again - with more staff not really knowing what was what - or at least they didn't communicate to us what was going on. We had to ask twice upstairs before being shown to our table - a great start.
So the room we sat in was cool - with big newspapers on the wall and huge industrial fans - they called it the paper room - made sense. Our fairly large group had a long table and we were able to talk and carry on like the overaged kids we are. Drinks were very good as was the saki. The food was good, not great, but certainly good. The portions were very small, however - including the size of the sushi cuts - noticeably small.
The price on the other hand was not so small. So, they went one direction with the portions and the opposite direction with the pricing - not a great formula for the consumer - but I guess a great formula for the operator.
Overall, there are plenty of great sushi spots in Las Vegas, I'll return to the others because they are far more consistent, trained and give better value.
Oh, did I mention that they try and sell you the nightclub next door several times while you are at the restaurant? Like I need some suit or bouncer like dude bothering me while I am eating dinner.... ah, no I don't.
Pros: Really neat spot with varied rooms and design.
Cons: Portion size and price. Lost staff. Trying to sell nightclub next door while eating.