Equipped with a mahjong lounge and hotpot restaurant, the luxury vessel is aimed squarely at China’s expanding middle class and their appetite for international travel.
State media have hailed the 16-deck behemoth as a “major milestone for the country’s shipbuilding industry” and a “crown jewel”.
Its construction was delayed by the Covid-19 pandemic, according to Lloyd’s Register (LR), which provided marine services for the ship.
It is China’s first foray into a sector dominated by European shipbuilders.
The country’s first homegrown passenger jet, the C919, also made its debut outside mainland China last month.
The complex projects are key to Beijing’s decades-long ambitions to compete with European and US rivals and cut down China’s reliance on foreign technology.
Many of Adora Magic City’s components were provided by international suppliers.
But in the future, “China has the opportunity to build its own supply chain”, Marco Scopaz, LR’s on-site project manager, said in an article on Lloyd’s website.
The Adora Magic City “marks the beginning of the country’s inevitable and rapid development in cruise design and construction”, he said.