Our collection of arcade games has something for everyone, from timeless classics to the latest hits. With a carefully curated list of the best games, you're guaranteed to have an unforgettable time. Whether you're a seasoned gamer or a newcomer, you'll find endless hours of fun and excitement with our top-rated arcade games.
Game | Description | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Arcade | ||||
![]() | Big Buck Hunter II Incredible Technologies (2003) | A shooting game where the player uses a pump-action shotgun and hunts deer and elk in various terrains in The United States and Canada. A sequel to the original Big Buck Hunter. Big Buck Hunter II was produced by Incredible Technologies in 2003. | ||
![]() | Claw Machine Pinnacle - ICE (2015) | Set to $3.00 per game. Claw machine is set to "play until you win." So, $3.00 guarantees that you will win a prize. | ||
![]() | Emulator Hometown Arcade (2024) | An arcade cabinet loaded with over 30,000 classic arcade games. The marquee on the gaming cabinet changes when different games are selected. | ||
![]() | House of the Dead 2 Sega (1998) | The House of the Dead 2 is a rail shooter light gun game. It includes an auto-reload feature that allows players to point their guns off-screen to reload their weapons without pulling the trigger. Players must shoot their way through hordes of zombies and other monsters while attempting to rescue civilians being attacked. Health is represented by torches at the bottom of the screen and are lost when the play is hit by an enemy or shoots a civilian. Bonus health can be awarded by rescuing civilians and finding first aid kits hidden in crates and barrels. As in the first game, this game incorporates a branching path system that allows for a variety of different routes in each stage depending on the players actions. This is expanded upon with more paths than the original which also lead a greater variety of stage layouts and locations, although the general story itself will always remain the same. The flashbacks to the first The House of the Dead in the game's introductory sequence were recorded using the game's engine. | ||
![]() | Lethal Enforcers Konami (1992) | Lethal Enforcers is a 1992 light gun shooter released as an arcade video game by Konami. The graphics consist entirely of digitized photographs and digitized sprites. Home versions were released for the Super NES, Genesis and Sega CD during the following year and include a revolver-shaped light gun known as The Justifier. The game was a critical and commercial success, becoming one of the top five highest-grossing dedicated arcade games of 1992 in the United States. | ||
![]() | Millipede Atari (1982) | Millipede is a fixed shooter video game released in arcades by Atari, Inc. in 1982. The sequel to 1981's Centipede, it has more gameplay variety and a wider array of insects than the original. The objective is to score as many points as possible by destroying all segments of the millipede as it moves toward the bottom of the screen, as well as eliminating or avoiding other enemies. The game is played with a trackball and a single fire button which can be held down for rapid-fire. | ||
![]() | NBA Jam Midway (1993) | NBA Jam, which features two-on-two basketball, is one of the first real playable basketball arcade games and is also one of the first sports games to feature NBA-licensed teams and players, and their real digitized likenesses. A key feature of NBA Jam is the exaggerated nature of the play – players can jump extremely high and make slam dunks that defy both human capabilities and the laws of physics. | ||
![]() | Pac-Man Namco (1980) | Pac-Man is one of the longest-running, best-selling, and highest-grossing video game franchises in history, and the game has seen regular releases for over 40 years, has sold nearly 48 million copies across all of the platforms, and has grossed over US$14 billion, most of which has been from the original arcade game. The character of Pac-Man is the official mascot of Bandai Namco, and remains one of the most recognizable video game characters in history. The franchise has been seen as important and influential, and is often used as a representation for 1980s popular culture and video games as a whole. | ||
![]() | PlayChoice 10 Nintendo (1992) | The Nintendo PlayChoice-10 is an arcade machine that consists of ten different games that had previously only been available on the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). It was one of the last arcade machines made by Nintendo before they announced they would stop making arcade equipment in 1992. Games available on PlayChoice-10 1. Super Mario Bros 2 2. Super Mario Bros 3 3. Jaws 4. Goonies 5. Excite Bike 6. The Legend of Zelda 7. Pro Wrestling 8. Rad Racer 9. Pinbot 10. Track and Field | ||
![]() | Scramble Konami/Stern (1981) | Scramble (スクランブル, Sukuranburu) is a horizontally scrolling shooter arcade video game released by Konami in 1981. It was distributed by Stern in North America. It was the first side-scrolling shooter with forced scrolling and multiple distinct levels, and it established the foundation for a new genre. | ||
![]() | StepMania (Dance Dance Revolution Cabinet Upgrade) Konami/MIT (2006) | StepMania is a cross-platform rhythm video game and engine. It was originally developed as a clone of Konami's arcade game series Dance Dance Revolution, and has since evolved into an extensible rhythm game engine capable of supporting a variety of rhythm-based game types. Released under the MIT License, StepMania is open-source free software. Several video game series use StepMania as their game engines. This includes In the Groove, Pump It Up Pro, Pump It Up Infinity, and StepManiaX. StepMania was included in a video game exhibition at New York's Museum of the Moving Image in 2005. StepMania was originally developed as an open-source clone of Konami's arcade game series Dance Dance Revolution (DDR). During the first three major versions, the Interface was based heavily on DDR's. New versions were released relatively quickly at first, culminating in version 3.9 in 2005. In 2010, after almost 5 years of work without a stable release, StepMania creator Chris Danford forked a 2006 build of StepMania, paused development on the bleeding edge branch, and labeled the new branch StepMania 4 beta. A separate development team called the Spinal Shark Collective forked the bleeding-edge branch and continued work on it, branding it sm-ssc. On 30 May 2011, sm-ssc gained official status and was renamed StepMania 5.0. Development on the upcoming version, 5.1, has gone cold over the past few years after a couple of betas were released over at GitHub.[7] Project OutFox (formerly known as StepMania 5.3, initially labeled as FoxMania) is a currently closed-source fork of the 5.0 and 5.1 codebase originally planned to reintegrate in StepMania, however further in development, it was decided to become an independent project due to its larger scope of goals while still sharing codebase improvements to future versions of StepMania. These improvements include modernizing the original codebase to improve performance and graphical fidelity, refurbishing aspects of the engine that have been neglected, and to improve and expand its support for other game types and styles. | ||
![]() | Super Hang On Sega (1987) | Super Hang-On is a motorcycle racing arcade game released by Sega, and the sequel to the acclaimed Hang-On. It uses a fully simulated motorcycle arcade cabinet, like the original game. | ||
![]() | Tetris Atari (1988) | A puzzle game where seven different types of blocks continuously fall from above and you must arrange them to make horizontal rows of bricks. Completing any row causes those blocks to disappear and the rest above move downwards completing four rows at once is called a Tetris. The blocks above gradually fall faster and the game is over when the screen fills up and blocks can no longer fall from the top. | ||
![]() | Time Crisis 3 Namco (2002) | Time Crisis 3 is a rail shooter arcade game and is the third installment of the Time Crisis series. Like its predecessor, Time Crisis II, it allows for two players to cooperate in a link play environment and has the Time Crisis signature pedal system for hiding and advancing and the first in the series to change or select weapons. | ||
Pinball | ||||
Sport Game | ||||
![]() | Air Hockey ICE | Classic 2 player arcade with LED lighting accents. | ||
![]() | Bubble Hockey - Bruins vs. Canadiens Chexx - ICE (1992) | Classic Bubble Hockey with an LED jumbotron, built in cup holders, and LED accent lights featuring the Boston Bruins vs. Montreal Canadiens. | ||
![]() | Skeeball (3 Lanes) Baytek | Skee-Ball is an arcade game and one of the first redemption games. It is played by rolling a ball up an inclined lane and over a "ball-hop" hump (resembling a ski jump) that jumps the ball into bullseye rings. The object of the game is to collect as many points as possible by having the ball fall into holes in the rings which have progressively increasing point values the higher the ring is. |
Our collection of arcade games has something for everyone, from timeless classics to the latest hits. With a carefully curated list of the best games, you're guaranteed to have an unforgettable time. Whether you're a seasoned gamer or a newcomer, you'll find endless hours of fun and excitement with our top-rated arcade games.
Big Buck Hunter II
Claw Machine
Emulator
House of the Dead 2
Lethal Enforcers
Millipede
NBA Jam
Pac-Man
PlayChoice 10
Scramble
StepMania (Dance Dance Revolution Cabinet Upgrade)
Super Hang On
Tetris
Time Crisis 3
Air Hockey
Bubble Hockey - Bruins vs. Canadiens
Skeeball (3 Lanes)