Best Arcade Machines for a Man Cave

At some point, you decided you were going to have a proper man cave. Good. That’s a reasonable life decision and you should see it through.

But here’s where a lot of people go wrong. They spend months agonising over the right bar fridge, the right couch, the right TV mount, and then they stick a dartboard in the corner and call it done. And sure, darts are fine. Nobody’s saying darts are bad. But if you want the room to have a genuine identity, if you want people to walk in and immediately understand that something special is happening here, you need an arcade machine.

Not because they’re nostalgic, though they are. Not because they look incredible, though they absolutely do. Because there is something fundamentally joyful about standing in front of a proper arcade cabinet with a joystick in your hand that no console replication has ever quite managed to capture.

The question is which one. So let’s sort that out.

What You’re Actually Choosing Between

Before getting into specific machines, it helps to understand the landscape, because “arcade machine” covers a lot of ground.

Original vintage hardware is the purest experience. An actual 1980 Pac-Man cabinet, original boards, original monitor. Beautiful. Expensive. Temperamental. Requires maintenance. For dedicated collectors and people with patience.

Restored and reconditioned originals split the difference. Vintage cabinet, serviced and working properly, often with upgraded monitors. Still the real deal but more reliable.

Multicades and MAME cabinets are modern builds or converted originals loaded with emulation software. One machine, hundreds or thousands of games. Excellent value. Purists will sniff at them. Purists also spend their weekends fixing capacitors.

Licensed reproductions are new-build cabinets made to original specifications by companies like Arcade1Up. Smaller footprint, lower price, genuinely decent quality for home use. More on those shortly, and not all of it flattering.

Know what you want before you start looking. It’ll save you a lot of time and a lot of spiralling.

Pac-Man

The obvious one first, and obviously for good reason.

Pac-Man is the most recognisable arcade game ever made. It crossed out of gaming culture and into popular culture so completely that people who have never touched a joystick in their lives know exactly what it is. The yellow disc, the ghosts, the waka-waka sound. It is genuinely iconic in the way that word is supposed to be used and almost never is.

An original Midway cabinet in good condition is a significant investment, but it is the version of this machine you actually want. If budget is the constraint, the Arcade1Up reproduction exists — we’ll deal with those properly in a moment.

If you’re only going to have one machine and you want something that every single person who walks into your man cave will immediately engage with, Pac-Man is the one. Just buy the best version of it you can afford.

Galaga

Pac-Man gets the fame but Galaga gets the loyalty.

Talk to people who grew up around arcades and a significant number of them will tell you Galaga was their game. The fixed shooter format is simple enough to learn in thirty seconds and deep enough that you can spend years chasing a high score. The enemy formations are beautiful in a functional way. The sound design is perfect.

It also has one of the greatest strategic quirks in arcade history: intentionally letting your fighter get captured, then rescuing it to create a dual-ship mode. That single mechanic turned a good game into an obsession for an entire generation.

An original Namco cabinet is gorgeous and surprisingly findable if you’re patient. Pairs brilliantly with Pac-Man if you’re planning to have more than one machine.

Street Fighter II

There are fighting games that came before Street Fighter II and there are fighting games that came after it, and those are two very different categories.

The 1991 Capcom release redefined what arcade gaming could be. Six-button layout, character selection, special moves that required actual practice to execute. It created the template that essentially every fighting game since has followed to some degree.

The cocktail cabinet version is interesting for a man cave because you can play it seated from either side, which changes the social dynamic entirely. Two mates sitting across from each other at a cocktail table with a Street Fighter machine between them. That’s a good Friday night.

Be aware that original CPS hardware can be expensive and requires some technical knowledge to maintain. A multicade loaded with the Street Fighter II variants is a more practical option for most people.

Donkey Kong

The machine that made Nintendo a household name and gave us Mario before anyone knew what to do with him.

Donkey Kong is brutally difficult by modern standards. There is no hand-holding, no checkpoint, no gradual difficulty curve. It starts hard and gets harder and that’s the whole deal. Which is exactly why it’s so compelling. The score chasing never ends because there’s always a better run to be had.

The original cabinet is one of the most visually striking ever built. That artwork, the colours, the sheer presence of the thing in a room. If you want a single machine that functions as both a playable game and a piece of wall art, Donkey Kong is the argument.

The Billy Mitchell controversy gives it a bit of extra conversational folklore if that matters to you. It probably shouldn’t, but it’s a good story.

Ms. Pac-Man

Yes, Pac-Man already made the list. Ms. Pac-Man deserves its own entry anyway.

The gameplay is meaningfully different. The mazes change. The ghost AI is more varied and less predictable. A lot of players who have spent time with both will tell you Ms. Pac-Man is the better game, and they’re not wrong.

There’s also a social dimension to this cabinet that original Pac-Man doesn’t quite match. The cocktail version in particular invites two-player alternating play in a way that keeps a room engaged. People queue. People kibitz. People claim they could do better and then prove themselves right or wrong. That’s exactly what you want a man cave arcade machine to do.

NBA Jam

If your man cave has any sport on the walls, any memorabilia, any sense that ball sports matter in this household, NBA Jam belongs in the conversation.

The 1993 Midway release is one of the most purely fun arcade games ever made. Two-on-two basketball with physics that obey no known law of nature, on-fire mechanics that turned players into unstoppable fire-breathing point machines, and commentary that somehow managed to be both annoying and beloved simultaneously. “He’s heating up.” “Boomshakalaka.” You know the words.

It’s a two-player game at heart, which makes it social in a way that suits a man cave perfectly. People who have never played it before understand what to do within about forty-five seconds. That accessibility is genuinely rare.

Mortal Kombat

Street Fighter II defined the fighting game genre. Mortal Kombat decided to cause a moral panic about it.

The digitised graphics, the fatalities, the congressional hearings. Mortal Kombat was controversial enough that it essentially forced the creation of the video game rating system in the United States. A game that changed legislation. Think about that.

As a man cave piece, it’s got everything. The shock value is long gone (what was controversial in 1992 is tame now), but what’s left is a genuinely great two-player fighting game with a visual style that holds up surprisingly well. The original cabinet in good condition is striking and a reliable conversation starter.

A Word on Arcade1Up Flatpacks

Arcade1Up has been selling flatpack arcade cabinets for a few years now, and they’ve been enormously popular. You can see why. The price point is accessible, the licensing is legitimate, and they ship in a box you can get through a standard door without hiring a removalist.

But let’s be honest about what they actually are.

These are three-quarter scale cabinets. Shorter than the real thing, which sounds like a minor detail until you’re standing in front of one and it hits you somewhere around the chest instead of at eye level. It’s a subtle wrongness that’s hard to articulate but impossible to ignore once you’ve played a full-size original.

The joysticks and buttons are functional but they don’t feel like arcade controls. There’s a sponginess to the inputs that serious players notice immediately. The screens are LCD panels running emulation, which is fine, but the scan lines and phosphor glow of a CRT monitor are a significant part of why original hardware feels the way it does. You don’t get that here.

Build quality is another honest concern. The flatpack MDF construction looks fine from across the room and feels less fine when you actually interact with it. These are not heirloom objects. They are consumer electronics dressed as arcade cabinets, and over time they behave accordingly.

None of this makes Arcade1Up a scam. It doesn’t. If you have a small space, a limited budget, or a partner who has granted you conditional approval for “one of those game things” rather than a full arcade restoration project, an Arcade1Up is a reasonable starting point. The Pac-Man and Galaga cabinets in particular are decent representations of the games themselves.

Just go in clear-eyed. You are not buying an arcade machine. You are buying a licensed novelty that approximates one. For some people in some situations, that’s exactly the right call. For people who want the real experience of having a genuine arcade cabinet in their home, it will eventually leave you wanting something better.

And “something better” will probably cost you more than if you’d bought it first.

The Multicade Option

Here’s the honest truth for most people setting up a man cave: a well-built MAME multicade cabinet gives you the best value by a significant margin.

One cabinet. Often a thousand games or more. Original arcade classics, obscure gems, everything in between. The joystick and button layout covers most genres. You can spend three hours in an evening bouncing between Galaga, Golden Axe, Bubble Bobble, and Final Fight without touching a menu more than twice.

The compromises are real. Purists will tell you emulation isn’t the same as original hardware, and they’re technically right. But if you’re a person who wants to enjoy games rather than maintain them, and if your man cave is a social space rather than a personal shrine to arcade preservation, the multicade is genuinely the practical choice.

Buy a quality build or build one yourself if you’re technically inclined. The communities around MAME cabinet building are helpful and the resources are excellent.

What to Think About Before You Buy

Space. A full-size upright cabinet is roughly 60–70cm wide and 150–180cm tall. Measure first. Then measure again.

Power. Most cabinets run on standard household power but some original hardware has older wiring worth checking before you plug it in.

Access. Getting a full-size cabinet through a door, down a hallway, or into a basement is a two-person job at minimum. Sometimes four people. Think about the path before the machine arrives.

Maintenance. Original hardware will need attention eventually. Monitors degrade. Boards fail. If you’re not technically inclined, budget for someone who is or choose a more modern option.

Budget. Good original cabinets in working condition start around $1,500–$3,000 AUD for the classics and go significantly higher for rarer machines or showroom-quality restorations. Arcade1Up reproductions start around $600–$800. A quality multicade build sits somewhere in the middle.

The Bottom Line

An arcade machine in a man cave isn’t a luxury. It’s a decision about what kind of room you want and what kind of host you want to be.

The right machine turns a room into a destination. People come over, they see it, they want to play, and then suddenly it’s midnight and nobody went home when they said they would. That’s the whole point.

Pick something you love. Buy the best version of it you can afford. Turn it on and don’t look back.

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