悉尼
Sydney hits you hard from the first moments. You step out of the airport, catch a train — and thirty minutes later you're at Circular Quay, where the white sails of the Opera House and the steel arch of the Harbour Bridge stand right in front of you. This isn't a postcard view — it's everyday reality in a city where five million people live around one of the most beautiful harbours on Earth.
Sydney isn't Australia's capital (that's Canberra, but nobody goes there for tourism). Sydney is the country's face, its economic engine and cultural heart. A city where surfing isn't a sport but a way of life, where you can walk to the beach from your office during lunch break, and where a barbecue in the park isn't a picnic — it's a social ritual.