This review is being written for the two food items that I tried. I am a pho'ckin pho aficionado. I have had great pho in every city I've ever visited and that is a whole lotta pho. I was drawn to this establishment because of the clever name. Once entering, you'll notice that everything is very clean and very open. The tables line mostly the borders of the restaurant with a few small tables in the center. It kind of reminded me of a fast food chinese restaurant. I became wary right away. I immediately noticed that my favorite appetizer was not on the menu. No egg rolls. Yeah...those delicious vietnamese egg rolls that you wrap with lettuce and dip in sweet fish sauce? None. There were no spring rolls either. So I continue to browse the menu and notice that it is more of a vietnamese/thai restaurant. I ordered the wontons with curry as my appetizer thinking it would be some type of fusion food. I also ordered the Vietnamese staple, beef pho. The boyfriend ordered a chicken pho. He's very White-American and doesn't know any better. I don't know why, but I had expected some actual dumpling-style wontons, but we got some fried wonton chips with a tiny dish of watery curry. Disappointing. I was served before my boyfriend was. I thought it was because it took longer to cook the chicken..or something, or maybe there was smaller stock of chicken broth/soup since most people order beef pho. I guess it just took longer to cook the chicken because he still got bowl of beef pho, just with chicken pieces instead of slices of beef. There was something about the noodles that just didn't taste right. Like, they purchased the packages of dried rice noodles instead of using freshly made rice noodles. It just wasn't good. I didn't think you could go wrong with a bowl of pho since it is such a basic food (like fried rice), but you can. If I ever go back, it would only be because it is literally across the street from my housing community. Perhaps the Thai food will be better.