
Las Vegas personal-injury attorney Steve Dimopoulos, the face on the omnipresent "We Win" ads, is trying to score big off the field too, listing his Ridges mansion in Summerlin for $22.5 million and dropping one of the valley's most amenity-stacked compounds back into a luxury market that has been anything but quiet.
National luxury roundups quickly spotted the move. According to Mansion Global, the six-bedroom property in The Ridges is being marketed at $22.5 million and is pitched with multiple entertainment zones plus a sizeable multi-car garage. The outlet also notes that Dimopoulos primarily calls a Strip penthouse home these days rather than this suburban spread, while listing photos lean hard into indoor-outdoor flow and resort-style landscaping.
Local paperwork fills in the backstory. County records show the house was purchased in 2025 in a sale to Dimopoulos. As detailed by the Las Vegas Review-Journal, the property at 14 Magic Stone Lane comes with an indoor basketball court, an elevator, multiple garages that together can fit about a dozen cars, a private theater and a pickleball court, which go a long way toward justifying the eight-figure price tag. The Review-Journal also noted that the residence previously changed hands after a price adjustment the year it sold.
Where This Fits In The Market
Dimopoulos' Ridges spread joins a steady run of top-tier moves around Summerlin and neighboring enclaves. A nearly 12,000-square-foot estate in the Summit Club closed for $22.5 million earlier in 2026, according to Homes.com News, a reminder that there is no shortage of ultra-wealthy buyers chasing privacy and concierge-style living. Brokers say Nevada's tax setup and the tight security at communities like The Ridges and The Summit keep out-of-state money circling at the very top of the market.
The Man Behind The Billboards
Dimopoulos is hardly a mystery name to locals. His "WE WIN" branding blankets the region, and the aggressive campaign has drawn coverage well beyond Clark County. Phoenix New Times and other outlets have broken down the firm's billboard-heavy approach, while real-estate watchers note that high-profile attorneys with downtown practices often offload sprawling suburban compounds when they pivot to lower-maintenance city living.
At this level, showings are typically by quiet invitation rather than open house circus, and agents expect the Ridges property to draw a mix of local collectors and out-of-state luxury hunters. Any shifts in pricing or marketing tactics will show up in Clark County records and agent disclosures as the listing plays out.









