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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Let it roll: how competitive socialising is pulling us away from the pubs

Competitive socialising - bringing together ten pin bowling, crazy golf, cricket or darts with food and drinks - is on the rise in the region, but is it a recipe for success?

Lane7 is a North East competitive socialising success(Image: Manchester Evening News)

Key requirements for a good Saturday night out 25 years ago were very simple. Who sells cheap trebles, where can I get a pizza/kebab at closing time and do I take a coat (obviously not)?

We didn’t need gimmicks – maybe a table and seating as a bonus depending on your company – but it’s fair to say alcohol was the main driver. Now it’s all change. People expect more for their buck on a night out, with many preferring more ‘experiential leisure’ than a pint.

Competitive socialising – the term which covers the growing trend combining games and activities with food and drink – is on the rise across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, and is especially visible here in the North East, where we’ve seen a boom in the number of companies opening venues for everything from axe throwing, crazy golf and interactive shooting to boutique bowling, indoor cricket, arcade games and escape rooms.

The next year will see even more openings in Newcastle city centre including darts-themed bar Flight Club, and two more sites for boutique bowling company Lane7, one of which could include a subterranean games venue.

So why are ‘competitive socialising’ venues proving so popular? And can they be sustained at a time when people are not so willing to spend huge sums on a night out, thanks to rising inflation?

From a business point of view, research carried out by the Gamechangers Organisation has shown that customer dwell time increases up to 72% when provided with entertainment. It also increases footfall, while encouraging repeat visits.

Social darts company Flight Club, will be hoping to see customers return again and again to its proposed site in Newcastle’s Eldon Square – its 13th in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

Steve Moore, CEO and founder of Red Engine, the hospitality group behind Flight Club and its shuffleboard sister firm Electric Shuffle, says falling alcohol consumption in younger generation plays a part in competitive socialising’s success.