Skip to main content

Return of the Pac: Namco plans to open a chain of arcade restaurants

Image used with permission by copyright holder

“Pong was highly social,” said Atari founder Nolan Bushnell in 2008, “It was okay for a woman to pull a guy off the bar stool to come and play with her, because it was only a two player game. What’s the essence of that game experience? The essence of that game experience is the social experience.” Bushnell’s grand vision for video games was always in the restaurant business, first with Chuck E. Cheese and later with uWink. He was never alone. Dave & Busters has tried to make that business as well. In 2013, one of the old masters of the arcade are going to try their hand at the business as well. Namco Bandai’s getting into restaurants.

“It’s no secret that we’ve been exploring a number of new business models and noodling the future of Out-of-Home entertainment for several years now, and out current planning does include an ‘upscale’ restaurant with ‘entertainment elements’,” Namco Entertainment Inc. VP David Bishop told Polygon, “And yes, we’ve been working with an established American restaurateur, as well as some other really talented external professionals, to develop the concept!”

The prototype restaurant, codenamed Level 256 after the final stage of Namco’s Pac-man, will likely be located somewhere near Chicago, Illinois.

Once upon a time, Namco Bandai was amongst those Japanese video game makers that straddled the industry, creative and financial titans fueled by groundbreaking arcade games. Space Invaders, Pac-man and other early hits begat later brilliance like Tekken, Time Crisis, and Ridge Racer. Throughout the ‘80s and ‘90s, Namco ran a number of arcade chains including Aladdin’s Castle, Time Out and CyberStation.

In the past fifteen years, arcade games have become an almost wholly irrelevant corner of the video game market with only a handful of game makers still making both games and money in the field. In the past year alone, Namco’s global sales of coin-operated arcade games dropped 30 percent. Its total sales came to around $424 million between April and October 2012. $400 million of that came from its domestic market in Japan. If the company can get a successful chain of game-centric restaurants running in the United States, it could potentially save Namco’s global arcade business. If that means more games like Tank! Tank! Tank! get made, all the better.

Editors' Recommendations

Anthony John Agnello
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Anthony John Agnello is a writer living in New York. He works as the Community Manager of Joystiq.com and his writing has…
The HP Victus gaming PC with RTX 3060 has a $550 discount
The HP Victus 15L gaming PC in white.

Gamers don't need to spend more than $1,000 if they want to buy a new gaming PC because there are affordable options like the HP Victus 15L gaming desktop. From its original price of $1,400, you can get it for just $850 as HP has applied a $550 discount on this machine. However, you shouldn't delay your purchase because there's no assurance that the gaming PC will still be 39% off tomorrow. If you want to make sure that you get it for less than $1,000, you're going to have to complete the transaction for it within the day.

Why you should buy the HP Victus 15L gaming desktop
You shouldn't expect the HP Victus 15L gaming desktop to match the performance of the top-of-the-line models of the best gaming PCs, but it's surprisingly powerful for its cost. Inside it are the 13th-generation Intel Core i7 processor and the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 graphics card, with 16GB of RAM that our guide on how much RAM do you need says is the best place to start for gaming. It's enough to play today's best PC games without any issues, and it may even be capable of running the upcoming PC games of the next few years if you're willing to dial down the settings for the more demanding titles.

Read more
Indiana Jones and the Great Circle: release date window, trailers, gameplay, and more
Indiana Jones standing in the jungle.

Grab your fedora, whip, and pistol because Indiana Jones and the Great Circle is plotting a course to consoles soon. After being announced via a small teaser in 2021, we're now finally starting to put the pieces together on the mystery that is this new title from MachineGames. While many very popular and successful games have been inspired by the Indiana Jones film franchise, including Uncharted and Tomb Raider, Indy himself has yet to star in a true action-adventure game worthy of his legacy. Will this game be the one to remind audiences who the true pioneer of set-piece action and globe-trotting puzzle-solving is? Only time will tell, but we can at least guess based on all the clues we've unearthed.
Release date window
Indiana Jones and the Great Circle will be released is scheduled for release sometime in 2024. Considering the slate of titles currently announced from first-party publishers, and how little we've seen of this game in comparison, we'd expect it to arrive in the last few months of the year. Of course, it could always slip into next year as well.
Platforms

Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, coming from Xbox-owned MachineGames, will be an Xbox console exclusive, but also be available on PC.
Trailers
Official Gameplay Reveal Trailer: Indiana Jones and the Great Circle

Read more
How to get to Monkey Island in Sea of Thieves
An election poster for guybrush in Sea of Thieves.

Over the course of its many years of updates and expansions, Sea of Thieves has had a few notable crossovers with other pirate franchises. The Pirates of the Caribbean crossover let you team up with the legendary Jack Sparrow, but the Monkey Island content felt like it came out of nowhere. For those unaware, Monkey Island is a series of pirate point-and-click games that were as funny as the puzzles were obscure. Thankfully, you don't have to intuit that you need to combine a cat whisker with a mason jar to bypass a skeleton guard to get to this new content, but it is more challenging than you might think.

Read more