LAGuide

20 Great LA Bars With Activities

The best LA bars with things to do besides drinking.
Button Mash pinball machines

photo credit: Jessie Clapp

Give humans some alcohol and a decent place to drink it, and we tend to have a good time. Give us some alcohol, a good place to drink it, and extracurricular activities thrown in, and things can escalate quickly. Whether it’s karaoke, cornhole, adult coloring books, or just your old-fashioned billiards, LA bars have no problem providing additional stimulation for when you’re tired of the same old neighborhood watering hole. Here are 25 great Los Angeles bars to turn to for activities beyond drinking.

THE SPOTS

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Koreatown

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Chi Chi is as ridiculous as it is fun. Equal parts nightclub, casino, and grownup Chuck E. Cheese, this neon-lit bar in Koreatown is home to virtual drinking games where you can win more than just a debilitating hangover. Each table is equipped with a tablet that lets you chat with neighboring parties and wager beers and soju over basic games of skill and chance. Whichever table loses the game pays for the bottle, but there’s a good chance the winners will share it with you out of pity. If high-stakes wagers aren’t your thing, you can also win prizes for your table, like ice cream or various bar foods like chicken wings, tteokbokki, and (previously frozen) mozzarella sticks.

On a busy night, Gold Line looks like a bar designed for hot people in vintage denim who pose for disposable cameras and smoke Newports on the curb. That’s mostly accurate, but beyond its looks, this Highland Park spot is the best listening bar in LA. Come here to drink whiskey highballs and dance to local DJs spinning anything from indie jazz to obscure Japanese funk from the ‘80s. Sit at the long wooden bar with a date, or pack out a leather couch near the disco ball with friends, and let the groovy Detroit techno mixes do the rest.

At Level 8, the question isn’t which activities are available to you, it’s how many can you check off in one night. This nightlife megaplex inside the Moxy Downtown includes a fancy South American steakhouse, a teppanyaki spot where magicians perform sleight-of-hand magic at the table, and a pool bar in the shape of a merry-go-round. You’ll see burlesque dancers, aerialists, spinning pianos, and a wrestling ring that descends from the ceiling. And if you bring a swimsuit, you can take a quick dip in the pool, too. If you can’t find things to keep yourself entertained at Level 8, it’s time to go home. 

Echo Park’s Button Mash is an old-school barcade where you’re (quite literally) surrounded by things to do. There are dozens of flashing pinball machines, skeeball, even whack-a-mole if you want to test your agility after a few craft beers. Their interesting beer list and solid bar food are also reasons to spend a night here with friends, or book a dinner at Button Mash’s nighttime concept Poltergeist. It’s a one-of-a-kind fusion meal that will give you plenty to talk about for the rest of the night. 

This El Segundo sports bar doubles as a tri-level golf simulator. Or is it the other way around? Reserve a tee time when you want to smack a few balls into the giant, all-weather outfield. Or sip a beer at a high-top table and order some better-than-average bar food. Their menu has what you’d expect at a sports bar: buffalo wings, chicken strips, and loaded nachos. Plus, you can also mix and match any six dishes for $65. So even if your friends don’t care about the name of that ball-picker-upper-cart thing, Top Golf is a great option for a picky group.

If you need a place to drink that’s fun but also serves more than just overpriced well drinks​​, you want EightyTwo. It’s an arcade bar in the Arts District that serves craft cocktails, draft beer, and wine inside and on their outdoor patio. There’s an area dedicated to old-school arcade games and another area entirely for pinball. They often host pinball tournaments, DJ sets, and other activities involving 30-year-olds getting too emotionally invested in vintage games. They don't allow food inside, but when you get hungry, walk across the street to grab pizza at De La Nonna.

Located on Hollywood Blvd., Black Rabbit Rose is part speakeasy, part magic show venue. The on-site theater is a ticketed situation (book via their website), with prices running about $49 for a show that runs roughly 45 minutes. If you’re not in the mood for some sleight-of-hand tricks and some fun burlesque dancers, skip the show and grab a drink at the bar. It sort of feels like drinking inside of a more sophisticated Hot Topic, plus you can order Thai bar snacks, creamy curries, and noodle dishes while you listen to live bands.

Sam First is a piano bar in Hawthorne where you might catch a live album recording on a random Friday night. Right around the corner from LAX, this jazz spot hosts weekly shows with big names in the jazz world like Christopher McBride and the LA Jazz Quartet. It’s the kind of swanky spot where you can recline on a leather bench with a Negroni in hand, snack on charcuterie, and get cozy with a date. On most nights, you’ll need a ticket to enjoy the show. But even if you forget to book ahead of time, spots are usually available at the door.

Trends come and go, but this bar in North Long Beach is forever faithful to its country theme. Extremely on brand for its name, Cowboy Country is a real saloon where people wearing big hats come to line dance and show off their new boots. There’s a mechanical bull to ride if you’re brave enough, live folk bands who perform on stage, and some decent bar food like burgers and hot dogs. Mainly, you should come here to boot scoot boogie until 2am in a room full of friendly cowboys.

photo credit: Jakob Layman

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On any given evening, you’re bound to see something unexpected at El Cid. This Silver Lake restaurant and bar hosts live music shows, Flamenco performances, and dance parties almost every night of the week. Whether you come to see your favorite Canadian rock band or a drag performance you didn’t have to record on your DVR, there’s usually something that draws people to the dance floor by the end of the night. If you’re not in the mood to party, El Cid’s hidden patio just off Sunset Blvd is a great place to sip cocktails, snack on tapas, and seduce a stranger with sultry eye contact.

Drinking and bowling go together like Sirs Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellan. Highland Park Bowl is a restored bowling alley from the ’20s that still has the Rube Goldberg-looking machine to reset the pins in the back. After a couple of excellent draft cocktails, even the most gutterball-prone bowler will be happy they’re here.

Walt’s Bar in Eagle Rock bills itself as an arcade bar, but it’s really just an excellent local dive bar that happens to have a whole bunch of pinball machines. There’s a ’50s theme here that doesn’t feel corny, and an excellent selection of beer and wine. It’s a relaxed crowd, but you can still get a little rowdy here without feeling awkward. Grab some popcorn from the machine, and commandeer that Evil Knievel pinball machine you’ve had your eye on all night.

One of the oldest bars in LA, Joe Jost’s has a whole room of pool tables in the back. It’s not the place to come for a drunk, late-night game of pool, but it is an excellent place to come on a Saturday afternoon to drink a couple steins of beer, and play a septuagenarian for the rights to a table. If you get hungry, buy everyone some pickled eggs and a basket of pretzels.

photo credit: Brennan’s Pub

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Venice’s famous turtle-racing spot is now run by a big craft beer group that owns a few restaurants throughout LA. That means you can drink a fantastic IPA while you watch Squirtle and Sheldon race each other. The races happen the first and third Thursday of the month, and the side patio absolutely fills up with people from all over LA who come to watch. Even when you’re not gambling on reptiles, Brennan’s is still a great place to come for activities. There’s a huge turf yard with cornhole, and inside, they have board games and a pool table.

When it comes to bars that know how to keep people entertained, Barney’s in West Hollywood is king. On top of your requisite pool tables, dart boards, air hockey, and shuffleboards, Barney’s has nightly events throughout the week—Tuesday trivia night is legendary and Wednesday karaoke night is probably your best place to see sitcom actors sing Sting in public.

Hamburger Mary’s might be a national chain these days, but there are still few better ways to spend a Saturday or Sunday than at the original Weho location for drag queen brunch. Is the food anything to write home about? Of course not. But you’re here to watch a drag queen death drop to a Tina Turner song, not eat a thought-provoking eggs benedict. Plan accordingly.

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The Spare Room inside The Roosevelt hotel in Hollywood is one of LA’s all-time great bars, and it has its two lanes of vintage bowling to partially thank for that. What’s vintage bowling? Basically, no aggressive neon blue TV screens searing your retinas all night. Scoring is kept the old-fashioned way—by writing it all down. The excellent cocktails coming out of the bar are the cherry on top.

Great karaoke isn’t hard to find in LA. But for anyone overwhelmed by the options, just head to Brass Monkey. The Ktown staple is not your typical private room karaoke joint—it’s a big bar with one karaoke machine and everyone clamoring to get their name on the waitlist before last call. If the notion of singing in front of complete strangers terrifies you to your core, don’t worry. You can sit, drink tiki drinks all night, and watch everyone else make asses of themselves.

There are aggressively-themed bars and then there’s Break Room 86. The bar inside The Line hotel in Ktown (you can only access it through the loading dock) takes its 80′s theme extremely seriously, starting with the vintage vending machine you have to walk through to get inside. Once you’re on the other side, you’re transported to an 80’s high school extravaganza complete with lockers, private karaoke rooms, a dance floor, and even Michael Jackson impersonators performing on top of the bar.

Back before the arcade bar became a concept a bunch of people in Brooklyn swear they invented, there was Blipsy Bar. The Ktown dive has been around for years, and while it’s not the most impressive arcade bar in town, it’s definitely the most fun. There are tons of old-school pinball machines, Donkey Kong, Rampage, Punch-Out, and even enough room for a tiny dance floor that gets wild in a hurry. Cash only.

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