Source: CEC Entertainment
In June 2020, just as some states began to lift their pandemic lockdowns, Chuck E. Cheese’s parent company CEC Entertainment Filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. It emerged months after bankruptcy with new leadership and was freed from about $705 million in debt.
Even as Covid subsided, the company faced another existential threat: figuring out how to entertain kids and their paying parents in an age of iPads and smartphones. The company has spent more than $300 million to address this challenge in recent years — and the investment is starting to pay off.
CEC Entertainment, which also includes Pascali’s Pizza & Wings and Peter Piper Pizza, has seen same-store sales increase for eight consecutive months, according to CEO Dave McClips. The company is not publicly traded, but it discloses its financial results to its bond investors.
CEC Entertainment’s annual revenue grew from $912 million in 2019 to approximately $1.2 billion in 2023. According to Reuters. And that’s with less open Chuck E. Cheese locations. China currently has 470 U.S. locations, down from 537 in 2019.
Sustaining growth will not be easy. Like all restaurants, the chain will have to win over consumers who eat less as costs rise. Chuck E. Cheese also has to capture the attention of kids and parents in a fragmented media market.
Goodbye, animatronics
The new cache takes a clear look at Chuck E. Cheese’s model — including his The famous animatronic bandCharles Entertainment Featuring Cheese and his friends.
McClips said, “We brought out the animatronics. It was a hot topic for a lot of the leggy bands, but the kids were using entertainment in a different way, you know, with the big screens. happening and ever-changing bite-sized entertainment,” said McKillips.
The chain also revamped its menu, upgrading to made-from-scratch pizzas. Kidz Bop becomes an official music partner. Other kid-friendly brands, such as Paw Patrol, Marvel and Nickelodeon, became partners for its games.
And then came the trampolines.
“We’ve got a wonderful opportunity for ourselves … active sports,” McClips said. He added that growth in the family entertainment category is largely coming from activity-based businesses, such as trampoline parks and rock climbing walls.
The company tested the trampoline first in Brooklyn and then in Miami, St. Louis and Orlando. As of December, 450 Chuck E. Cheese locations now have kid-sized trampolines. And unlike SkyTubes or ball pits of the past, customers have to pay extra to use the trampoline. (The ball pits disappeared from Chuck E. Cheese locations in 2011, while the Sky Tubes continued for nearly another decade.)
After the company spent $350 million remodeling Chuck E. Cheese locations, McKillips now says the process is complete.
“We needed to fix the product. The product is fixed,” he said.
Subscription spenders
A fun empire?
McKillips’ biggest dreams for the chain and its mascot lie outside the four walls of its restaurant.
And that’s not all. The company has considered the possibility of a game show. It has one. Awesome YouTube channelWith videos focused on his characters, not his pizza or games.
In addition, Chuck E. Cheese himself has six albums available on streaming platforms, and his band plays live, choreographed concerts.
“My dream is to be in a feature film,” McClips said.
Correction: A previous version of this story misstated the company’s current debt load and its investments to refinance its positions.