Carnival Replaces Luke's With Fahrenheit 555 on Adventure, Encounter
The swap signals Carnival’s push to unify its Australian ships under one dining playbook, phasing out legacy partnerships as it tightens brand consistency.
The swap signals Carnival’s push to unify its Australian ships under one dining playbook, phasing out legacy partnerships as it tightens brand consistency.
Costa's redeployment underscores how cruise lines are shifting capacity back to the Mediterranean as European demand outpaces Asia's rebound, reshaping summer competition.
The incident spotlights how routine maintenance on mega cruise ships can turn deadly, renewing scrutiny of safety interlocks and work controls in passenger areas.
Cruise lines are using the semiquincentennial to add cultural storytelling at sea as competition heats up for North American vacations. Alaska’s capacity race is the real battleground.
By locking in Italian shipyard space well into the next decade, Norwegian signals how the cruise comeback is turning into a capacity scramble where build slots are the real prize.
AIDA’s debut underscores Carnival Corporation’s push to turn Celebration Key into a multi-brand private hub, deepening Grand Bahama’s pull beyond Carnival and Princess.
Winter storms are increasingly reshaping Mediterranean cruise schedules, testing how quickly lines can pivot. Nearby ports like Toulon and Villefranche gain from the spillover.
Virgin’s surge underscores how adults-only cruising is moving from niche to mainstream, pushing rivals to add kid-free sailings and rethink onboard spaces.
As Carnival adds another Excel-class ship, the pivot from roller coaster thrills to a bigger water park and music venues shows how megaships are evolving to win repeat cruisers.
The refit underscores how Chinese operators are reshaping large legacy ships for first-time family cruisers, betting that Northern China homeports can challenge Shanghai’s dominance.
Norwegian's chief executive handoff underscores how activist investors are reshaping cruise boardrooms, pressuring lagging operators to close the gap with bigger rivals.
Aroya’s Gulf debut signals how Saudi-backed cruising is expanding beyond the Red Sea, as regional ports compete to become the Middle East’s year-round homeport network.