Continental Investment's public footprint in Dubai currently consists of one tracked off-plan project, with no confirmed district concentration across multiple areas. The developer has not published open pricing, positioning the project at price on request — a model that can reflect either a pre-launch or boutique direct-sales approach, or a limited market presence that has not generated the data volume needed for independent price benchmarking. Buyers engaging at this stage should request the RERA permit number for the specific project, cross-check it against the Dubai Land Department's developer registration, and confirm that sales proceeds are held in a RERA-regulated escrow account, a legal requirement under Law No. 8 of 2007 for all off-plan sales in Dubai. These steps are standard for any off-plan purchase, but they carry more weight when a developer has not yet built the multi-project delivery history that independently corroborates reliability. Without prior completions on public record, a buyer cannot benchmark handover timelines, construction quality, or aftersales responsiveness against documented buyer experience. That information gap is the core risk to price correctly before committing to a reservation. If Continental Investment has completed projects in other markets, request those references directly and verify them through independent channels rather than treating Dubai as the only data point available.