Round1 is a Japanese bowling and arcade chain operating a location in Oklahoma City that combines 30 lanes of 10-pin bowling with a full arcade, karaoke rooms, and a food menu. Unlike single-purpose bowling alleys in the metro, Round1 packages three entertainment formats into one venue, making it suited to groups with mixed interests rather than dedicated bowlers alone.
Round1 operates as a hybrid entertainment center anchored by bowling but built around flexible group outings. The Oklahoma City location sits within the category of modern "social bowling" venues that target dates, corporate events, and friend groups as much as serious bowlers. It differs from traditional Oklahoma City bowling alleys by design: the layout assumes people will split time between lanes, arcade machines, and private karaoke rooms. The arcade section includes both classic cabinets and newer simulator games. Food is served as grab-and-go or counter service, not table service.
Round1 operates 30 bowling lanes under standard 10-pin rules. Shoe rental is included. Pricing is per-person per half-hour of lane time (not per game), which changes the math compared to traditional alleys. A group of four bowlers renting one lane for one half-hour typically costs around $20 to $25 per person during standard hours, with higher rates for late-night slots and weekend evenings. Shoe rental is included in lane rental; no separate fee applies. Karaoke rooms rent by the hour and range from $30 to $60 depending on room size and time of day; verify current rates before booking, as pricing varies by day and season.
Arcade play is pay-as-you-go using a card-loading system; no membership required. Typical arcade games cost 50 cents to $2 per play. Round1 offers no all-you-can-play arcade passes.
Food options include pizza, hot dogs, nachos, and soft drinks. Prices are standard venue markup, typically $8 to $14 per item. Round1 does not serve alcohol.
Oklahoma City has two main types of bowling operations: traditional alleys that focus on league and casual bowling (such as establishments in the Bricktown and Midtown areas) and entertainment centers like Round1. Traditional alleys usually price by the game rather than the half-hour and cater more to repeat bowlers and league players. Round1's half-hour pricing and arcade-first design favor one-time groups and date nights over regular league bowlers. If you want to bowl seriously and check scores per game, a traditional alley is clearer. If you're assembling four to six people and want an activity that doesn't require everyone to bowl, Round1's mixed-venue format is the only option in Oklahoma City that combines all three under one roof at a single price point.
Round1 works best for groups of 4 to 12 people with mixed interests: some want to bowl, others want arcade games or karaoke. Corporate team-building events and birthday parties are primary use cases. Couples and small friend groups also use it for casual outings. The venue is less ideal for competitive or league bowlers who want detailed scorekeeping and a serious lane environment. Families with very young children may find the late-night atmosphere (the venue stays open late, especially on weekends) louder and more crowded than traditional family-friendly alleys.
Walk-in groups are accommodated based on lane availability; busy weekend evenings may have a wait. After paying and checking in, you'll receive shoes and be assigned a lane. The bowling area is open-plan with arcade machines and food scattered nearby. You can place a food order while bowling. Karaoke rooms require advance booking or a short wait; ask the counter staff. The venue is well-lit and designed for group movement, so people can rotate between bowling, arcade, and eating without much friction. Plan for at least two hours if you want to do all three activities.
Round1 opens daily at noon and typically closes between midnight and 2 a.m. depending on the day; verify hours on the official website before a late-night trip, as weekend hours extend later than weekday hours. The venue is located in a shopping center with free lot parking. The center is accessible by car and does not require public transit. No reservation is required for lane bowling on a walk-in basis, but calling ahead during peak times (Friday and Saturday evenings) increases the chance of immediate availability.
Round1 fills a specific niche in Oklahoma City: groups that need one address for multiple entertainment types and don't mind paying per-person half-hour rates instead of traditional per-game bowling costs. It's the only venue in the metro that bundles lanes, arcade, and karaoke as a seamless operation.
