Time Out: St. Clair Square Mall
St. Clair Square debuted in 1974. A Time Out arcade near JCPenney drew Metro-East teens for Dance Dance Revolution until shuttering around 2010. References Wikipedia: St. Clair Square
Location
St. Clair Square debuted in 1974. A Time Out arcade near JCPenney drew Metro-East teens for Dance Dance Revolution until shuttering around 2010. References Wikipedia: St. Clair Square
Randolph Mall (1982) hosted a Time Out arcade in Unit G-1 beside Chick-fil-A. Local ads from 1995 touted “2-for-Tuesday Tokens” and promoted its marquee titles—Daytona USA and Mortal Kombat 3. The arcade closed in 2003 during a wing remodel but lives on in Asheboro Facebook nostalgia threads. References Wikipedia: Randolph Mall
Northridge Mall (1974) featured Time Out at 1260 Northridge Center by the early 1990s; it remained until a 2015 modernization swapped the space for dining. ReferencesWikipedia: Northridge Mall
Northgate in Marin opened 1965. A Time Out arcade near Century Theatres flourished through the late 1990s—famed locally for four-player Turtles in Time—before closing circa 2008. ReferencesWikipedia: Northgate Mall (CA)
Mayagüez Town Center (opened 2003) hosted a compact Time Out in Space 9 beside Caribbean Cinemas, operating roughly 2004 – 2016 with ticket games and a single DDR cabinet. ReferencesPrimera Hora profile, 2003 opening (Spanish)
Greenwood Park Mall (1980) included a Time Out at Suite 4020 near Von Maur; Indianapolis teens recall Marvel vs. Capcom 2 marathons until the arcade’s closure circa 2013. ReferencesWikipedia: Greenwood Park Mall
Coral Ridge Mall opened in 1998. Its Time Out (space 712) drew University of Iowa students with DDR Extreme and plush Hawkeye bears until shuttering around 2011. ReferencesWikipedia: Coral Ridge Mall
Burlington’s mall opened in 1969; Time Out occupied spaces E10-11, buzzing with Gauntlet and ticket games. The arcade closed during the 2010 rebrand to Holly Hill Mall. ReferencesWikipedia: Holly Hill Mall (formerly Colonial Mall Burlington)
When The Mirage debuted in 1989 it included a modest kids’ arcade (“Games of the Gods”) near the pool entrance. Most machines were removed during a 2015 renovation; no public arcade is listed today. ReferencesWikipedia: The Mirage
The Mayan AKA Mayan Adventure, a 45-foot-waterfall–themed restaurant and arcade, opened 2000 in Sandy, Utah. It closed in 2011; KSL News documented its demolition and fondly remembered its volcano-themed game room. ReferencesSalt Lake City Weekly(2011 closure)Reviews on Roadside America