Step off Prague’s busy streets into leafy Dejvice for a self-guided beer and food walk with digital directions. You’ll taste classic pivo, share Czech snacks in real pubs, wander past embassies and villas, and get small stories along the way — all for less than you’d expect. It’s a few hours you’ll remember every time you crave fried cheese or hear Czech laughter.
I’ll admit, I wasn’t sure if a self-guided beer and food thing would actually feel local — but the Anti Tour Prague surprised me. The first step was just figuring out the metro (Jim’s directions made it less intimidating than I expected), and then suddenly we were out of the tourist crush, standing under these old trees in Dejvice. It smelled like rain on pavement, even though it hadn’t rained yet. There was this quiet — not silence, but you could hear people chatting in Czech from open windows above us.
The digital guide felt like having someone nudge you along — “turn here,” “order that.” At the first pub, I tried to say “pivo” properly and the bartender grinned (maybe at my accent). The beer was cold and tasted a little grassy, which I liked more than I thought I would. We shared fried cheese with tartar sauce that left my fingers greasy; honestly, I still think about that snack. Walking between stops, we passed these grand villas and embassy buildings — not what I pictured for Prague at all. My partner kept stopping to take photos of doors. No one rushed us.
Later, there was a spot where the guide told us to look up at some old Art Nouveau detail — easy to miss if you’re just thinking about your next beer. By the time we got to Bubenec for craft brews and a proper Czech meal (the roast pork was so tender), I felt like we’d slipped into someone else’s routine for an afternoon. It cost less than dinner back home, which is wild considering how much we ate and drank. We finished with some experimental beers that tasted almost floral — not sure I’d order them again but glad I tried.
The tour is designed to last about 3 hours at a relaxed pace.
Yes, one digital download can be used by your whole travel group together.
The route leads through Prague’s Dejvice neighborhood and into nearby Bubenec.
No, your purchase is for the digital guide; food and drinks are paid as you go at each stop.
Yes, you’ll start by taking the metro from central Prague to Dejvice using Jim’s instructions.
Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller during the walk.
Yes, service animals are allowed throughout the route.
The tour is not recommended for pregnant travelers due to alcohol stops.
Your experience includes an immediate digital download of The Anti Tour magazine: a self-guided beer, history, and food walk through Prague’s Dejvice and Bubenec neighborhoods with step-by-step directions, local tips on what to order at each stop, photo suggestions along the way, plus public transport guidance from central Prague — all ready to use on your phone as soon as you book.
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