![]() ![]() There were a few fuzzy or burned-in monitors, but that was about it. ![]() The condition of the machines is remarkable, more like a private collection than a public arcade. They have a good selection of pins as well, mostly from the late-'70s through the 90s, along with a couple of brand new machines and a few electromechanical games from the late-60s/early-70s. Games seem to be grouped loosely by manufacturer and type, so for example there was a row of fighting games, and all of the Taito games like Jungle Hunt and Elevator Action were together. The only Nintendo cabs were Donkey Kong Junior and Popeye. Donkey Kong was conspicuously absent, however. The selection of classic games is very good, with most of the real classics represented, and quite a few of the less well known games as well. Very cool if you're a hardcore gamer, less so if there is someone with you who would appreciate a place to sit or a distraction other than the games. Just a huge, very dark room loaded with games and a small prize counter for the redemption games. No memorabilia on the wall like Funspot has, no kiddie rides, no period music in the background. They have more than 300 machines on the floor, mostly pinball and classic arcade machines, some redemption machines, and a handful of the newer, larger, DDR/driving/shooting games that every Dave and Buster's has. I spoke to the woman at the counter (one of the owners, I believe) and she said they opened in January, 2010. I stumbled across this place while looking at a list of locations that have Pacman Battle Royale.
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