Bangkok
Thailand's capital is a city that rewards those who dive in. The Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew are the obligatory starting point, but the real Bangkok unfolds in the neighborhoods: Chinatown's Yaowarat Road comes alive after dark with seafood stalls and neon signs. Khao San Road remains the backpacker epicenter — loud, chaotic, and surprisingly fun at 2 AM. Across the river, Wat Arun's porcelain-encrusted spires catch the light at sunset, and the quieter Thonburi canals offer long-tail boat rides past wooden stilt houses.
For food, Bangkok is unmatched. Jay Fai's Michelin-starred crab omelet, the boat noodles at Victory Monument, and the pad thai at Thip Samai are pilgrimages in themselves. Chatuchak Weekend Market is 15,000 stalls of organized chaos — vintage clothing, handmade ceramics, street food, and live plants. When the heat gets too much, the rooftop bars along Silom and Sukhumvit offer cold drinks and skyline views, and the BTS Skytrain makes the whole city surprisingly navigable.
Beyond the tourist trail, neighborhoods like Ari (hip cafes, vinyl shops), Talat Noi (street art, old Chinese shrines), and Bang Krachao — the "green lung" accessible by ferry — show a more local side. The city's temple count runs into the hundreds, but Wat Pho's reclining Buddha and Wat Saket's Golden Mount viewpoint are the ones worth prioritizing.