Location

Time-Out: Forest Village Prk

Forest Village Park Mall (1979) hosted a Time Out opposite the food court, popular for NBA Jam and ticket redemption. The arcade closed in 2003 during the center’s transition to *The Centre at Forestville*. References Wikipedia: The Centre at Forestville

Time-Out: Forest Mall

Forest Mall opened in 1973 and added Time Out near Walgreens in the late 1980s. Fond du Lac teens recall Street Fighter II marathons. The arcade closed in 2014; the entire mall was demolished in 2020. References Wikipedia: Forest Mall

Time-Out: Forest Fair Mall

Forest Fair Mall (later Cincinnati Mills) debuted in 1989. Time Out occupied the mega-mall’s Level 2 amusement wing, boasting a motion-simulator theatre and giant redemption center. The arcade ended operations by 2010 as the mall emptied. References Wikipedia: Forest Fair Mall

Time-Out: Fayette Mall

Fayette Mall (1984) welcomed Time Out near Macy’s by 1990. *Lexington Herald-Leader* coupons (1996) offered “20 tokens for $3.” The arcade closed in 2004 during the food-court expansion. References Wikipedia: Fayette Mall

Time-Out: Fairlane Village Mall

Fairlane Village (1974) featured a Time Out opposite Boscov’s, remembered for Gauntlet and prize cranes. It closed circa 2008; Schuylkill County Facebook groups still post photos of its neon “TIME OUT” letters. References Wikipedia: Fairlane Village Mall

Namco Cybertainment Swap-Shop: Dba Time-Out # 5345

The Fort Lauderdale Swap Shop—one of America’s largest flea markets—features an indoor amusement building where Namco Cybertainment once branded the arcade Time Out #5345. Dozens of redemption games complement the venue’s drive-in theater and circus acts, and the arcade remains active under generic “Amusements” signage. References Swap Shop Official Site – Indoor Amusements

Namco #80074

Namco location #80074 operated a small inline arcade off Emporium Circle outside Town East Mall. Locals remember token specials tied to Dallas Mavericks ticket stubs and a lineup heavy on Ridge Racer and claw games. The space was converted to retail in 2010. References Google Maps: 3544 Emporium Circle (former arcade site) Wikipedia: Town East Mall (context)

Monkey Bars

Monkey Bars opened in 2019 as a family fun center with ninja courses and a redemption-style arcade featuring modern card-swipe machines—Super Bikes 3, ticket cranes, and a VR station—serving Auburn University families. References Monkey Bars Official Site

Millenium Youth Entertainment

Opened in 1999, Austin’s Millennium Complex offers a bowling alley, skating rink, and a 40-game arcade anchored by Dance Dance Revolution and NBA Hoops. City-owned, it was built to provide East Austin youth with affordable recreation and remains active today. References City of Austin – Millennium Complex