SuperFest Manila takes over City of Dreams this weekend

Image by: City of Dreams

Car culture goes full throttle as Superfest Manila transforms City of Dreams Manila into a two-day automotive playground on February 7–8, 2026, featuring 80 head-turning machines from around the world.

At the main concourse, 30 supercars steal the spotlight—European exotics, American muscle, and Asian performance icons all in one high-gloss lineup. Head down to the parking building’s ground floor, and you’ll find 50 modified builds staged in an immersive underground-scene setup, celebrating everything from Japan tuner style to US and Euro custom culture—plus homegrown Filipino builds pushing creative boundaries.

Pop culture fans are in for a treat

Movie and anime-inspired cars make a major appearance, including tributes to:

• The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift

• Back to the Future

• Initial D

Concept and art cars from Thailand, Japan, and the Philippines also join the display—highlighted by creative interpretations of the iconic Filipino jeepney.

Fun activities & competitions

• Die-cast downhill race challenge

• Loudest Roar exhaust competition

• Burger-eating contest

• TikTok dance challenge

• Meet-and-greet with car show models

• Special appearance by content creator Tanya Chinita (Day 2)

Image by: City of Dreams

Raffle & rewards

Melco Club members—new and existing—get a chance to win an all-expense-paid 3-night automotive tour in Japan (via Autotour Japan).

Other prizes include:

• Nobu Hotel Manila overnight stays

• DreamPlay passes

• Nobu Spa treatments

• Dining credits across resort outlets

Raffle winners will be drawn at CenterPlay on February 8 at 8 PM.

For inquiries:

Call: 8800-8080

Email: [email protected]

If it’s speed, style, sound, and spectacle you’re after—Superfest Manila (Feb 7–8) is where car culture comes alive.

Tagged , , ,
Anjo Perez

Anjo Perez

Anjo Perez is the Executive Editor of Autocar Philippines and one of the country’s most respected voices in motoring journalism. With more than three decades of experience, he began as a photojournalist for the Manila Bulletin before moving into automotive writing in 1997. He also serves as the Motoring Editor of The Manila Times. A staunch advocate of road safety, motorsports, and responsible driving, Anjo combines technical insight with storytelling that reflects Autocar’s legacy as the definitive authority on cars, mobility, and automotive culture in the Philippines.