Bellagio (Las Vegas Strip)

Bellagio Resort & Casino (3600 S. Las Vegas Blvd.) does not maintain a public arcade; instead, its primary gaming offerings are the main casino floor and sportsbook. However, convention-level corridors historically hosted small clusters of multi-game cabinets labeled “KidsQuest” in the early 2000s. Those machines were removed during a 2011 remodel, leaving Bellagio without a…

Boomtown Casino (Biloxi Ms.)

Boomtown Casino Biloxi (676 Bayview Ave.) includes a second-floor “Boomtown Arcade” with a rotating lineup of modern redemption and video games—marketed to families while adults visit the gaming floor. Player club brochures from 2023 tout the arcade as “kid-friendly entertainment with prize redemptions.” References https://www.boomtownbiloxi.com/amenities/family-fun

Cannery Row Arcade / Oscar’s Playground

Located at 640 Wave Street on Monterey’s historic Cannery Row, the Cannery Row Arcade offers tourists an old-school mix of pinball, air hockey, and ticket redemption games—often bundled with adjacent attractions like the Mirror Maze. Its neon “ARCADE” sign has greeted visitors since the early 2000s. More recently, the arcade changed its name to Oscar’s…

Canton Sportplex

Canton Sportplex

Canton SportPlex (5 Carver Circle) is primarily an indoor sports arena and roller rink, but it also maintains a small arcade corner catering to birthday parties and youth-league visitors. Machines rotate seasonally, mixing older racing cabinets with modern claw and ticket games. References https://cantonsportplex.com/

Castle City Fun Center

Castle City Fun Center (82-530 Highway 111, Indio) opened in March 1997 with go-karts, mini-golf, and a mid-sized video-game arcade anchored by ticket redemption machines, all housed within a replica of a medieval castle. The venue featured a rather upscale restaurant (Castle City Grill) that was well-regarded by locals. The facility’s last known mention is…

Cracker Jax

Cracker Jax

Cracker Jax, opened in 1996 at 16001 N. Scottsdale Rd., is a 28-acre family fun park offering go-karts, mini-golf, batting cages, and an indoor arcade stocked with more than 100 video and redemption games. The game room—billed simply as “The Arcade”—features classics like Skee-Ball alongside modern ticket machines, and remains a popular cool-weather retreat in…

Cyberstation: Lakeshore Mall

Cyberstation: 424 Washington Park Mall

Washington Park Mall in Bartlesville, Oklahoma opened in 1984. Suite 424 operated as a Cyberstation arcade during the late 1990s, boasting Tekken 3, Ridge Racer, and redemption games popular with Bartlesville’s youth. Bartlesville *Examiner-Enterprise* mall insert (5 Nov 1999) announced “Grand Re-Launch of Cyberstation,” offering bonus tokens with every plush prize. The arcade continued until…

Cyberstation: Lakeshore Mall

Cyberstation: 480 Governor’s Square

Governor’s Square Mall in Clarksville, Tennessee opened in 1986. Inline suite 480 became a Cyberstation arcade around 2001, positioned near the food court. Shoppers recall Time Crisis III, Dance Dance Revolution, and plush‐prize cranes illuminating the concourse. Clarksville *Leaf-Chronicle* ads from March 2003 tout “Spring Break Token Blowout” at Cyberstation, drawing teens from nearby Fort…

Cyberstation: Lakeshore Mall

Cyberstation: 812 Old Hickory Mall

Old Hickory Mall in Jackson, Tennessee (opened 1967) listed Suite 812 as “Cyberstation Video Arcade” in a 2002 leasing brochure. Tucked between the JCPenney wing and the food court, the unit housed compact Namco cabinets—Tekken Tag, Time Crisis II—and redemption counters bustling on Saturday nights. The arcade closed by 2012 during a major renovation; suite…

Cyberstation: Lakeshore Mall

Cyberstation: Aiken Mall #121

Aiken Mall in Aiken, South Carolina opened in 1989 at 2441 S. Whiskey Road. Storefront #121 became a Cyberstation arcade circa 1998, offering House of the Dead, Daytona USA, and a suite of ticket games for the region’s teen crowd. Local *Aiken Standard* classifieds from July 2000 list “Cyberstation token sale – 4 for $1,”…