• For some family gaming, check out Big Al’s in east Vancouver, 16615 S.E. 18th St., 360-944-6118. The well-known institution has plenty of bowling lanes, with 30 set up as “traditional” and another dozen presented “lounge style.” It offers a 4,000-square-foot arcade and a party area that can accommodate 1,300 people. Television screens are everywhere, including 76 high-definition plasmas, 17 projection models and one gigantic wall screen that’s 36 feet wide and 8 feet tall.
• In central Vancouver, Allen’s Crosley Lanes, 2400 E. Evergreen Blvd., 360-693-4789, has 42 lanes of bowling, a restaurant, a kids’ game zone and a lounge. Bowling, the main event, comes in a variety of flavors. Cosmic bowling, which features dark alleys, black lights, laser shows and fog machines, is a huge hit with the teenage set on Fridays and Saturdays from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. Monte Carlo bowling, every Saturday night at 6:30 p.m., is more of an adults game with a little gambling thrown in. And then there’s regular open-play bowling every evening.
• For a nostalgic family hangout, Golden Skate Family Fun Center, 4915 E. Fourth Plain Blvd., 360-696-0368, has been a place for fun since it opened as Holcomb’s Recreation Hall in 1944. Visitors can bring their own skates or grab some rental skates — or they can skip the skating experience entirely and play a game or two of laser tag.
• For ice skating, check out Mountain View Ice Arena, 14313 S.E. Mill Plain Blvd., 360-896-8700. The 16,000-square-foot ice rink in east Vancouver hosts hockey tournaments and figure skating competitions, but it also puts on numerous public sessions for kids and adults.