"Decent Mongolian food, but very overpriced. My wife and I got the all-you-can-eat option, the cost of which took my breath away when I saw the bill at the end. (They did not tell us the price at the outset, neither did the menu display the price. We paid CHF 48.00 per person. In USD, the total cost came out to about $125. The meal was probably worth $15 per person, in terms of flavor and quality. In retrospect, I made the mistake of misreading the price on their website, which I visited before we went to the restaurant. I must have read the lunch menu price, which was CHF 28.50—still absurdly high, but less abominable than CHF 48.00. As starved as I was, I was willing to forgive the CHF 28.50 cost for my meal, so long as I could eat good Mongolian food. The food itself was decent. Nothing special, in truth. Still, it’s hard to mess up noodles, spices, meats, and vegetables, and I did feel satisfied after I finished eating. But in no way, shape, or form should that meal have costed anything even remotely close to USD 125.00. I should add that the lady who took our order—one of two workers I saw in the entire restaurant—was kind and helpful, and perhaps a skilled saleswomen as well, considering she convinced me and my wife to order the buffet option. It is also worth noting that my wife and I were the only people eating in the restaurant, and we were there for a solid hour. Would I go here again? Never. There is better food at much more reasonable prices elsewhere, perhaps even down the street from Mister Khan. Yet as detrimental to my wallet as this meal was, it still was tasty enough and satisfied my hunger for Mongolian food. In the end, as I am no longer starving and can think clearly, I can only admit to one enduring truth: my wallet has joined the ranks of the millions who fell vanquished to the great khans throughout history. Mister Khan carries on this destructive legacy well, albeit in a financial rather than physical sense."