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…
All Trinkets in Tales of Kenzera: Zau, explained
The main character of Tales of Kenzera: Zau stands with two elemental items.

Your main upgrades in a metroidvania like Tales of Kenzera: Zau will always be your new abilities. These transform the way you move and fight, but there are other ways you can make Zau a more powerful shaman. Trinkets are introduced right away, but aren't given away as freely as you might think. Each one requires you to overcome a small trial that tests your platforming abilities off the main path. Technically, you can miss every single one aside from the one you begin the game with. Even though there are a few fast travel points, backtracking isn't a particularly fun experience. Here are all the Trinket locations in Tales of Kenzera: Zau, plus which ones you should equip.
All Trinket locations
You can see which zones have Trinkets on the map, and for the most part, you will be able to grab them as you navigate through them for the first time. Here are each of the Trinket locations roughly in the order you should naturally be able to get them.
Battering Stance
This is the Trinket you begin the game with and is equipped by default.
Lifted Spirit

The first Trinket is found in this side path trial in The Buluu Caverns.
Retaliating Spirit

Read more
How to start The Forgotten Kingdom DLC in Remnant 2
Invoker

Remnant 2 is a massive game that already boasts nearly endless replayability, but that isn't stopping developer Gunfire Games from adding even more to do in the popular looter shooter. The game's new DLC, The Forgotten Kingdom, provides players with a substantial amount of extra stuff to check out, such as new biomes to explore, an additional archetype known as The Invoker, and plenty of fresh enemies to take down. If you're ready to see all of what The Forgotten Kingdom DLC has to offer, read on to learn how to access it from within the game.
How to start The Forgotten Kingdom DLC
The first step in accessing The Forgotten Kingdom DLC is to ensure you've purchased and downloaded it. You can buy the standalone version from your respective storefront for $10, or you can opt to snag the $25 bundle, which includes The Awakened King, The Forgotten Kingdom, and another future DLC that has yet to be announced. If you intend to play the full trilogy of DLCs, the former is your best option, as you'll save five bucks off the total cost of all three.

Once you've purchased and downloaded the DLC, you'll be ready to access The Forgotten Kingdom by visiting a World Stone and opening Adventure Mode. You'll need to have completed the Yaesha biome at least one time. At that point, you can select "Reroll Adventure Mode" and choose The Forgotten Kingdom: One Shot on the right, which will notably give you exclusive DLC content your first time through. Keep in mind that while this initial run won't feature any older content, your subsequent playthroughs of Yaesha will weave DLC areas in with main campaign content.

Read more
All Baobab Tree locations in Tales of Kenzera
Zau fights a dragon in Tales of Kenzera: Zau.

While it wasn't marketed as being a particularly punishing game, Tales of Kenzera: Zau is by no means easy. You will have plenty of environmental challenges that can instantly sap your life, and the enemies you face -- especially the bosses -- are no slouches. When you first begin, it will only take a couple of bad hits to send Zau to the land of the dead himself. Alongside the Trinkets you can unlock through hidden challenges around the map, there are also Baobab Trees where Zau can stop to reflect on his journey thus far, have a short dialogue with Kalunga, and get a small addition to his health bar. Like everything in the game, these trees aren't prohibitively hidden, but you could easily pass one by and have no idea where it was when trying to backtrack. These are all the Baobab Tree locations so you can max out your health bar.
All Baobab Tree locations
There are six Baobab Trees to find in Tales of Kenzera: Zau and each adds a small segment of health to your total. When you collect them all, you will roughly double your HP bar. Here are each of their locations in the rough order you should naturally find them in. Most can be picked up on your first time through that area.
Ikakaramba

This one is very hard to miss as it is directly on your critical path. If you do, you can fast travel to the nearby campfire to grab it.
The Great Cliffs

Read more