I believe all inclusive hotels ought to be banned by international law. While on holiday, one of the pleasures is to have dinner in a nice restaurant. All inclusive hotels destroy the local restaurant market. I probably didn't read the description well enough, and was surprised to find at check-in that this was an all-inclusive. My bad, I expected something more up-market for my €.
Also, I expect all-inclusive hotels to serve bad food, and deliver poor service. I was not disappointed. The dining room was noisy and unpleasant. The buffet had many dishes, but usually only one meat and one fish. The long waiting in line to get at these sought-after items was not worth it, the food was bland and boring. What would Gordon Ramsey have said? Better to have 20 nice dishes than 100 bad ones.
I couldn't even be bothered to stand in the bar line after fighting to fill my plate and find a seat, so water or thin "juice" it was with every meal we had there. (Obviously, we ended up eating most of our meals outside the hotel anyway.)
There is also a choice of three a la carte restaurants. Actually two, but one of them has two set menus. And you can only visit one of them - once. The one we tried would not have survived a week outside the hotel...
The lobby bar was of the same sub-standard. After a long line, you get a small glass of cheap diluted spirits or really bad wine...
So, the rooms: We had booked a family room with sea view, but you had to stand outside on the 1 sqm "balcony" to see the sea. The pictures showed a nice room with a sofa - we had a single chair in front of the TV. They offered to change the second day, but only to offer us something really dire.
The hotel has wireless internet everywhere - in theory. The only place bordering on reliable and useful was in the lobby. (Tip to hotel: You need a wireless network, not a bunch of separate access points!)
All in all, not the nice hotel I thought I had booked, but probably ok for families with smaller kids and tight budgets. The clients seemed to be mainly Russian and Turkish families, lots of small children.