Tulsa's Incredible Pizza Company 8314 East 71st Street, Tulsa, OK 74133
About the Business
Tulsa's Incredible Pizza Company is a popular food and entertainment destination located at 8314 East 71st Street in Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States. This family-friendly restaurant offers a wide variety of delicious food options including pizza, pasta, salads, and desserts. In addition to the tasty food, guests can enjoy a fun atmosphere with arcade games, go-karts, mini-golf, and more. Whether you're looking for a place to enjoy a meal with family or friends, or a place to host a birthday party or corporate event, Tulsa's Incredible Pizza Company has something for everyone. Come visit and experience the incredible food and entertainment options at this exciting institution.
Photos
Location & Phone number
8314 E 71st St, Tulsa, OK 74133, United States
Hours open
Monday:
Closed
Tuesday:
Closed
Wednesday:
11:00 AM - 9:00 PM
Thursday:
11:00 AM - 9:00 PM
Friday:
11:00 AM - 9:30 PM
Saturday:
11:00 AM - 10:00 PM
Sunday:
11:00 AM - 9:00 PM
Reviews
"I thought the price was a little high but it was so well worth it to have my son's party there. They were so accommodating for our last minute preparations. And it was really nice, everything. My son wanted was there. He had fun his friends had fun. It was a awesome day.!"
"Good family fun overall. There were a few games down but other than that we got to do all the attractions with no wait. The food was really good too"
"I have not been here in ages and didn’t have high expectations. We took out 4 year old and kept ourselves busy for 3+ hours. I do think kids under 4 would not have much they could participate in. Our daughter is right at 40 inches. She was able to ride the small roller coaster that spins and the go carts. We got a package the 37.99$ package for each of us, buffet/4 ride passes/20$ game card, and used my Military discount, which made it around 110$ for all 3 of us. We had 5 ride passes left over, but used all the game card. My husband had just as much fun playing the games as my 4 year old. They have nostalgia games and new games. The games seem a little pricey, but I didn’t feel as bad since I bought the package deal. 60$ worth of game cards kept us pretty busy. They also have a trampoline area where you can jump for 15 mins at a time. You have to pay 2$ for socks or just bring your own grip socks. Our daughter really enjoy this, as well. The food is very basic but we all know we aren’t going to a 5 star buffet. It’s a bunch of junk food, so the kids love it. My favorite is the ice cream. :)"
"Had a birthday blast with the kids! The premium birthday package is worth the bucks! The whole party managed to game and 2 events per game card, for hours. Fr we stayed with birthday girl for 6 hours!! Lol had a blast"
"Not so incredible and everything but pizza! (Mediocre food, $1.25-1.75 very short games, $1.50-2 high-risk gambling, broken stuff, could easily burn $30-50 / hr / person.) We came for a school activity. The food is mediocre at best. The bland pizza is exceptionally thick crust and minimal toppings (Little Caesars level). Most pizza stations stayed empty, only basic pepperoni or cheese or a veggie with very thin small pieces of the toppings. I can say the gluten-free thin crust pizza actually tasted good, and ironically was actually the best! The desserts were just outright horrible, tasteless ice cream / cones, my son said the chocolate was actually just brown with no chocolate flavor, cinnamon rolls had thick breading with mediocre frosting, and I can't figure out what the soaked fatty-like bread dish was sitting in some kind of sauce that tasted like weak watery molasses. Otherwise they had standard pastas which were okay, a basic taco / nacho station and a basic hot dog or chili dog or Frito chili station. But again, the big part, the pizza, was bad, generally absent, and minimal type selection. The games are all $1.25 to $1.75 for 15-45 seconds (very few $1.75 are 60 sec), and the ones that mention specific ticket winnings actually aren't that number (black hole; 15=11, 40=39). Keep in mind that the point-based games will only give you about 20-40 for skill of most players. So you can expect 15 to 30 tickets per $1 of game money. Many of the games don't give tickets either. A very high number of machines are pure gambling mechanics, something quite inappropriate for a place that focuses on kids and proudly displays the Christian fish symbol on the entry doors. (Don't claim it's just entertainment, that's what actual skill-based video games are for.) Worse, at $1.50 to $2 per play for very small to zero winnings and a minuscule chance of a big win. (One of the big wheels, if you land on the thin blue line that's 100 tickets, it's not, it's a free retry to get the same thing again in order to actually win the tickets. Wheel of Fortune only gives up to five tickets for an expensive spin, with virtually no chance of even winning the 200 or up to 2500.) So always read the prize indicator and instructions, and stick with skill based mechanical or video games, even as short-timed as they are. We saw people play several of the claw games and at $2 a piece, they as usual are calibrated to be incapable of carrying the prize. Somebody had a small lightweight prize in the machine, fully lifted, and it dropped as soon as the machine started moving even though it was the best grip possible, firmly centered in all three tongs. Other games were typical carnival rigging style. The ski ball uses exceptionally lightweight bouncy plastic, not the proper heavy balls that the bowling area uses (which means they can't claim they don't carry them for safety). While it is somewhat expected for these games to be difficult to win very much, at IPC they feel very designed to not allow winning at all. The thing they don't tell you on the website, is that the attractions are mostly unavailable. They have a schedule of when the big attractions are usable. And you can't just go flag down an employee, because even those are scarce. Another thing is that many of the machines were out of order, including almost the entire miniature bowling. For the laser tag, they had plenty of vests out that weren't lit up/ not working. Of the basketball game, several of the balls were popped. Many of the card readers are tricky to get them to read, and some of the games don't give a good indicator that the card has been scanned, causing you to accidentally activate several credits (at $1.75 each). The miniature golf scorecards show 9 holes, but there's only eight. Even then, they aren't very attractive and rely on lumps and slopes for difficulty, with minimal object interaction. Plus, most objects don't really interact with guiding the ball for a better setup, and feel like random decorations meant to be somewhat obstructions or a few wide tunnels."
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