Ask any Gen-Z viewer to name a rom-com they’ve watched more than once—the kind they’ve paused, taken a screenshot, and quietly built mood boards around—and Crazy Rich Asians will almost always make the list. Not just for the romance, but for the way it staged Singapore: indulgent yet intimate, cinematic yet strangely familiar. Yacht parties and garden soirées, yes, but also late-night hawker tables, the people, the culture, the warmth and the thriving energy.
What the film did, perhaps unintentionally, was introduce Singapore as a place of contrasts that didn’t feel forced. It’s the kind of city where your plans don’t really stay plans. You step out for “a quick coffee” and somehow end up in a design store, then a vintage lane, then a bar you didn’t bookmark but absolutely should have. Where a night out doesn’t peak at dinner, it starts there. Where something as simple as a hawker meal can turn into a full-blown crawl, and “one drink” is never just one drink.
For a Gen-Z traveller, this is precisely the appeal. Not the spectacle alone, but the ease with which the city accommodates different moods. And if the movie offered a glimpse of Singapore at its most heightened, a trip to the city lets you experience it in a way that feels far more personal.
Day 1: Ease in, but make it immersive
First-day rule: don’t try to do everything. Start at the ArtScience Museum, where teamLab Future World turns digital art into something you move through rather than just look at. Walls shift, colours respond, entire rooms change depending on where you stand, and yes, your camera roll will take a hit (in a good way).
From here, head out to Mandai Wildlife Reserve for Exploria, which feels a bit like stepping into a nature-meets-digital fever dream. It’s immersive, surreal, and yes, very content-friendly. Pro-tip: Go early for both. It’s quieter, easier to move through, and you won’t feel like you’re navigating around crowds the whole time. For the evening, keep things interesting. Book AndSoForth, where dinner unfolds across multiple rooms, each with its own setting, story and course. It gives theatre-kid energy but for the cool-crew. Pro-tip: Book ahead. This one is hard to get.
Day 2: Main character wandering + a night that escalates
Start in Kampong Gelam, one of those neighbourhoods where the IYKYK crowd hangs out. Murals, independent stores, cafés and side streets all sit within a few minutes of each other, and you get to splurge on creative trinkets. Stop by Beyond The Vines (you’ve most likely seen their bags taking over your feed), then make your way through Haji Lane, where stores like Snooze Store is a haven for sneaker-lovers to upgrade their drip. Pro-tip: Don’t get here too early. The area takes its time to open up.

Then, take it city-wide and do what everyone ends up doing: café hop. Café Monochrome is playful and very visual, almost giving hand-drawn vibes. Nylon Coffee Roasters is niche, serious about brews, which genuine coffee drinkers will find amazing. Tiong Bahru Bakery is perfect for croissants and other breakfast bakes, and % Arabica is where you need to go for a Spanish latte that rarely disappoints.
Then the night takes over. Start at Offtrack, vinyl-led, dimly lit, easy to settle into, especially if you’ve picked up a date in the city. Move on to Sago House, which brings the energy. And if you’re still going (you probably will be), end up at Headquarters open Wednesday-Saturday), underground, unpolished in the right way, and built around the love for music and dancing more than anything else.











