Players sitting at bright PC gaming stations from behind, station number 031 on the wall of the computer club

A computer club worth the queue

The computer club worth queuing for

QUEUEUP is a social PC gaming club with no weekday booking. You grab a paper ticket, settle into the lounge, and our board calls your number when a station opens. The wait is half the fun.

No card needed to hold a spot — just your name and a number.

Your ticket

#082

Party of 1 · any open station

Now serving
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How the queue works

Four honest steps, no app to babysit

Weekdays run on live queue, not reservations. It keeps the club fair for the walk-in crowd and means a good seat is never locked behind someone's forgotten booking. Here is exactly how a visit goes, start to station.

01

Take a ticket

Tell the desk your name and party size. You get a printed number and a rough call time — that's your place held.

02

Wait in the lounge

Grab tea, pull up a board game, or scan the "looking for a duo" wall while the board counts up.

03

The board calls you

When your number lights up on the NOW SERVING board, a station is wiped down and ready with your name on it.

04

Five minutes to sit

You get five minutes to claim it. Miss the window and you slide to the next open slot — no ticket is ever burned.

Now serving on the floor

The board never lies

One screen tells the whole room where it stands

The same board hangs over the lounge and glows across the floor. Numbers move up together, the queue of dots steps forward, and the first dot walks off to a seat. Everyone can see how close they are without asking the desk twice.

The lounge

The waiting room is the second reason to come

Most clubs treat the wait as dead time. We built ours to be worth showing up early for: a warm corner with a kettle that never fully cools, a shelf of quick board games, and a wall where regulars post what they want to duo. Plenty of players line up, get called, and then linger anyway.

A corner of the QUEUEUP lounge with a water cooler and a pile of backpacks beside gaming chairs Lounge #01

Drop your bag, hold your spot

The waiting corner has room for coats, bags, and a group of three arguing over who queued first. Water is free, the cooler is loud, and nobody minds if you camp there past your call.

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An electric kettle and a mug with a paper tag on the tag counter of the computer club lounge Lounge #02

Tea, tags, and a quiet window

Every mug wears a numbered tag so it finds its way back. Steep something, watch the floor through the glass, and keep half an eye on the board. It is a good place to lose twenty minutes on purpose.

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  • Board-game shelfShort-round tabletop picks for parties waiting on a two- or three-number gap.
  • "Looking for a duo" wallPin your handle and preferred role; find a second before your seat is even called.
  • Bottomless kettleTea and instant coffee on the house, refilled through every peak hour.

Stations

Why the seat is worth the wait

A ticket only makes sense if the station at the end of it earns the patience. Ours are kept clean between every player, tuned for competitive frame rates, and watched by an admin who is one row away when something misbehaves.

A long wooden desk of clean gaming monitors and keyboards ready for the next player at the computer club

Consistent, wiped, and ready

No two seats should feel like a downgrade. Peripherals get a wipe between sessions, cables are dressed and out of the way, and each station carries the same tuned setup so the number you draw never decides your night.

  • High-refresh displays tuned for smooth, competitive play
  • Mechanical keyboards and low-latency mice cleaned per session
  • Wired network on every seat — no shared wireless drop-outs
  • An admin on the floor for logins, saves, and quick fixes
Average call at peak: under 20 min

Peak hours, told straight

We won't pretend the line vanishes

Friday nights and weekend afternoons fill up — that's the honest truth. What we can promise is a moving board, a comfortable place to wait, and a desk that will always tell you a real number instead of "soon." If the gap is long, the lounge makes it feel short.

Rates

Priced by the clock, nothing hidden

You pay for the time you sit, not for the wait. Rates are posted at the desk and on the board so there are no surprises when you cash out your hours.

By the hour

1 hour block

Single hourly block on any open station. Extend from your seat if the board is quiet and nobody is waiting on your number.

Evening pass

3 hour stretch

A longer evening stretch at a better rate — take the ticket once and keep your seat through the block. Best value for a full session with friends.

Weekend pre-book

0 ticket needed

On Saturdays and Sundays you can reserve ahead if you'd rather skip the live line. Pre-book below and walk straight to a held seat.

Queue stories

Things that happened in line

The best moments here rarely happen at a keyboard. A few from the lounge, told by the people who were waiting.

Met over a board game

"We were two numbers apart and both waiting on a duo. Someone dealt us into a quick tabletop round, we lost badly, then got called to seats side by side and queued together every week after. The line introduced us before the game did."

ticket #061 & #063

Ticket #100 of the week

"I didn't plan it, but my number came up as the hundredth ticket printed that week. The desk cheered, the board flashed, and I got my hour on the house. Cost me nothing but the wait I was already happy to do."

ticket #100

The fastest sit-down

"Walked in on a slow Tuesday, drew a ticket, and the board called me before my tea had cooled. Forty seconds from paper to seat. It's rare, but when the queue is short the whole thing just flows."

ticket #012

Ticket FAQ

The questions we get at the desk

How long is the wait at peak?

On a busy Friday or weekend afternoon, expect the board to reach your number in roughly fifteen to twenty-five minutes. Slower weekday shifts often mean a seat within a couple of numbers. The desk always gives you a real estimate when you take your ticket, and the board updates live so you can judge for yourself.

Can I leave the queue and come back?

Yes. Your number holds while you step out for food or air — just be back near the board before it reaches you. If you miss your call, you aren't kicked out; you slide to the next open slot and keep your same ticket. Tell the desk if you'll be gone a while and they'll watch for you.

Can I hold a ticket for a friend?

One ticket covers your party, so add your friend when you take it and you'll be called together for adjacent seats. If they arrive later, drop their name at the desk and we'll keep the seats paired as long as the group is on one ticket. We don't hold separate numbers for people who aren't in the building yet at peak.

Are younger players welcome?

Families are welcome and the lounge is a calm place to wait together. Younger players should come with a guardian, and quieter daytime hours are the easiest time to get a seat without a long line. The board-game shelf and free tea make the wait easy for the whole group.

What if I miss my call?

Nothing is lost. A missed number simply rolls to the next available station, and your ticket stays valid until you sit. If the room is quiet you'll often be called again within a minute or two. Let the desk know if you've stepped far away, and they'll flag your number to hold a little longer.

Weekend pre-book

Weekend pre-book

Rather skip the live line on a Saturday or Sunday? Reserve a seat ahead and walk straight in. Weekdays stay ticket-only — this form is just for the weekend.