Films and series In 1983, Pizza Time Theatre created a Christmas TV special, titled "The Christmas That Almost Wasn't", produced by animation company
Kadabrascope, a Pizza Time Theatre subsidiary. The special centers around Chuck E. Cheese and Jasper T. Jowls as they travel to the North Pole to save Christmas. In 1999, Chuck E. Cheese released a direct-to-video film, titled "
Chuck E. Cheese in the Galaxy 5000", produced by
FUNimation Entertainment. The movie follows Chuck E. Cheese and his friends as they travel to a distant planet to win money to fix Charlie Rockit's aunt and uncle's tractor engine. In September 2020, CEO David McKillips said that the company had recently launched an entertainment division, the goal being to produce movies and TV shows featuring the CEC cast of characters. In January 2024, CEC Entertainment announced a game show, being developed by Magical Elves. The series will feature adults competing with larger versions of classic Chuck E. Cheese arcade games, such as pinball, air hockey, and
Skee-Ball. As of June 2025, no more details have been announced. In June 2025, CEC Entertainment announced an animated Christmas film called "
A Chuck E. Cheese Christmas" The film was released on both
Amazon Prime Video, and the Chuck E. Cheese
YouTube channel on November 27, 2025. Produced by HappyNest Entertainment. The special features
Nathan Kress as the voice of
Chuck E. Cheese.
Video arcade Since the company's inception, one of the primary draws for the business has been its
video arcade offering inside restaurants. The coin-op games originally accepted brass
tokens issued by the company, stamped with various logos and branding that evolved over time. The company experimented with a card access method as a replacement for tokens in the late 2000s, which allowed customers to load credits onto a card that could then be swiped for access at arcade games and refilled later. It was tested under different names, including "Chuck E.'s Super Discount Card" and "Chuck E. Token Card.". In late 2016, a new card system known as "Chuck E.'s Play Pass" was introduced to replace tokens throughout the chain, utilizing a similar method of gameplay as the Token Card.
Animatronics Munch's Make Believe Band "1-Stage" in
Lo Barnechea, Chile, 2012 Another primary draw for the centers since their beginning through the mid-2010s has been their
animatronic shows. There have historically been several different styles of animatronic shows in use within the company, details of which would vary depending on when the location opened, whether it was renovated, available room for animatronic stages, and other factors. Over the years, these animatronics have often been supplemented by (and in recent years been completely replaced by)
costumed characters. When the first location opened in 1977, the animatronic characters were featured as
busts in framed portraits hanging on the walls of the main dining area. The original show featured Crusty the Cat (the first character to face retirement as he was soon replaced with Mr. Munch in 1978), Pasqually the Singing Chef, Jasper T. Jowls, the Warblettes, and the main focus of the show,
Chuck E. Cheese. By 1979, many restaurants had also added "cabaret" shows in separate rooms of each restaurant. The in-house control system, which consisted of a
6502-based controller in a card cage with various driver boards, was called "Cyberamics". While Fechter separately produced the
Rock-afire Explosion animatronics for ShowBiz Pizza through the early 1980s, Bushnell and Pizza Time Theatre continued work on characters for their portrait format and newer Balcony Stage shows under the umbrella of the Pizza Time Players. Development on Cabaret concepts slowed greatly after Pizza Time Theatre Inc.'s bankruptcy in 1984 and its purchase by ShowBiz a year later. From 1985 to 1990, the merged company kept their brands (and their respective animatronic shows) mostly separate. After Fechter refused to sign over the rights to the Rock-afire Explosion to Showbiz Pizza Time, Inc., "Concept Unification" was undertaken beginning in 1990 and continuing through 1993 to eliminate Fechter's characters from ShowBiz locations and replace them with that of the Chuck E. Cheese's characters. The animatronics built by Creative Engineering for their Rock-afire Explosion band were retrofitted as "Chuck E. Cheese & Munch's Make Believe Band", with new costumes and cosmetics. The exact year of when Concept Unification started is debated by fans. At first, the existing Pizza Time Theatre Cyberamics did not coincide with the character update, but they were later reconfigured and costumed to reflect the updated Munch's Make Believe Band character designs. In November 1990, ShowBiz Pizza Time debuted a new stage show for future CEC locations called the "Road Stage", being the first Cyberamic stage to use the Munch's Make Believe Band format to coincide with Concept Unification. The Road Stage featured a full-bodied Chuck E. Cheese Cyberamic standing on a platform, while the rest of the half-bodied band characters were set on buildings. The first location to install this stage opened in
Jonesboro, Georgia in November 1990, and the last Road Stage location opened in June 1992 in
Sun Valley, California. In February 1992, the Cyberamic 2-Stage debuted at the
White Settlement, Texas location, featuring Chuck E. and the band on two separate stages. The last location to install a 2-Stage was in
Florence, Kentucky between 2002 and 2003. In March 1992, the 1-Stage debuted at the
Waldorf, Maryland location, featuring all characters together on one stage. The last location to install a 1-Stage was in
Citrus Heights, California, between 2014 and 2015. In August 1996, a test stage at the Valley View Mall/Montfort Drive location in
Dallas, Texas, was created—the first attempt at a single-character animatronic stage, The Awesome Adventure Machine. This animatronic show consisted of neon flashy lights and items around the show. This stage took over what is commonly referred to as a "3-Stage" (an animatronic show converted from a former Rock-afire Explosion show from
Showbiz Pizza Place). This animatronic show was never installed in any other location and was removed by late 1997 or early 1998 and replaced by Studio C. , 2017 Beginning in December 1997 with the
Brookfield, Wisconsin, location, a new animatronic show began being installed in new stores, referred to as "Studio C", consisting of a single 32-movement Chuck E. Cheese animatronic character created by
Garner Holt alongside large television monitors, lighting effects, and interactive elements. Studio C eventually served as the replacement for Munch's Make Believe Band stages, with the last MMBB location opening in
Mentor, Ohio in July 1998. Following the discontinuation of MMBB shows, the Studio C series of stages continued to evolve, starting with the Small-Town Studio C 2000 in early 2000, the "Studio C 2000" in late 2000, and the Small-Town Studio C 2003 in July 2003. The last new Chuck E. Cheese's location to receive a new Studio C 2000 stage opened in
Concepción, Chile in August 2012, and the last existing Chuck E. Cheese's location to receive a Studio C 2000 was in
Cincinnati, Ohio around 2014. In late 2009, a new single-character stage was conceptualized by
Westerville, Ohio-based brand agency Chute Gerdeman for Chuck E. Cheese's, and this idea became the "Star Stage". The Star Stage debuted in April 2010 as a test stage at the new Valley View Mall/Montfort Drive location in
Dallas, Texas, replacing their Studio C 2000 stage. The Montfort Drive location's Star Stage reused the 32-movement Chuck E. Cheese animatronic, and the scenery included 2 side vertical video walls, curtains for the main stage, a cut out background, and 2 lowering recording studio and sports stadium backdrops. Chuck E.'s stage and the "APPLAUSE" and "ON THE AIR" signs were recycled from Montfort Drive's Studio C 2000 stage. The stage curtains would be removed by late April 2010 and side video walls would be replaced with flatscreen TVs in early 2012. Former CEC entertainment director Jeremy Blaido ordered for the show be removed in 2012 due to internal controversy with new entertainment director Robert Gotcher at the time, leading to Gotcher being fired that year. The Star Stage at the Dallas, Texas Chuck E. Cheese's location ended up being removed in August 2012 after over 2 years in operation. In September 2010, a new stage titled the "Chuck E.'s Make Believe Band" stage (also known as Concept Unification 1-Stage by fans) was tested at the
Whitehall, Pennsylvania location. It reused the Concept Unification animatronics from the 3-Stage and put them all together on a single stage with new backdrops. On this show, Munch's Make Believe Band would be renamed to Chuck E.'s Make Believe Band. Two more CU 1-Stage shows would be installed at the
Springfield, Illinois and
Columbus, Georgia locations in 2011 before it was retired. The Chuck E.'s Make Believe Band stage is Chuck E. Cheese's latest stage featuring the full band to date. On April 26, 2011, a new test stage titled the "Galaxy Stage" debuted at the new Chuck E. Cheese's location in
West Melbourne, Florida. The Galaxy Stage was themed around a futuristic city, and was the first Studio C stage not to use the Studio C name. It did not expand beyond its test location, and was removed in April 2023 during the West Melbourne location's 2.0 remodel renovations. Following the removal of the
Dallas, Texas (Montfort Drive) location's Star Stage in August 2012, a new stage premiered at that location, referred to as "Circles of Light", utilizing the animatronic Chuck E. Cheese produced by
Garner Holt for the previous Studio C series of stages. The stages were manufactured by Corman & Associates and the control system for the new stage type was produced by Weigl Controls, developing a custom version of their ProCommander series of controllers for CEC. In July 2020, the
Darien, Illinois location replaced their 3-Stage animatronics and props with the Studio C 2000 backdrops and 16-movement animatronic from the
Joliet, Illinois location which had remodeled in early 2020. Another installation of this unique stage would be installed in November 2020 at the
Chicago, Illinois location on
Kedzie Avenue. The Darien location would remove their stage during their remodel in June 2023, and the Chicago (Kedzie) location would remodel and remove their stage in August 2024. For stores still featuring animatronics, updated programs for Munch's Make Believe Band stages were generally distributed on DVD between 2007 and 2022. Studio 'C' stores ran off of 3 DVDs and a
floppy disk from 1999 to 2022, previously having used
LaserDisc. Weigl (Circles of Light stages and Dance Floors) stores use a USB and a MicroSD card. In mid-2022, a new system for running the animatronic shows (3-Stage, Cyberamics, and all Studio 'C' and Weigl shows) was introduced that would, instead of using physical media such as
DVDs, function using the store's Wi-Fi connection. The implementation of said device caused a problem for the Studio C shows, as their previous show system(s) had special file formats for programming signals; therefore the switch to the new system would cause no animatronic movements to happen, except for a "Random Movements" program. The Munch's Make Believe Band stages (CEI and Cyberamics shows) were not affected by this change of systems, although programming of new songs would cease in 2023 due to budget cuts.
Elimination of animatronics In 2002, Chuck E. Cheese's opened three locations, two in
Waco and
Lake Jackson, Texas, and one in
Dover, Delaware, experimenting with a new type of format featuring a smaller layout, a buffet, no play structures, no animatronic stage (albeit featuring a "blue screen" from the Studio 'C' stages), and a constant presence of the Chuck E. Cheese costumed character. All three "Chuck E. Cheese's Buffet" locations would remodel to standard Chuck E. Cheese's and receive "Small-Town Studio 'C'" stages with an animatronic between 2003 and 2006. In September 2012, The "Circles of Light" stage at the Montfort Drive location in Dallas, Texas removed their animatronic, initially using the stage platform for costumed character performances. Beginning in early 2013, Circles of Light stages began being installed in newly opened stores without an animatronic, although a few Circles of Light stores would open with an animatronic from 2012 to 2018. In 2014, the Montfort Drive location would test a prototype of the "Chuck E. Live Stage" in their gameroom. In August 2013, the newly opened
Montgomery, Alabama location was the first Chuck E. Cheese's in 11 years to open without any animatronics, as it opened with a Circles of Light stage with no Chuck E. animatronic. Circles of Light would also replace 4 older animatronic stages in CEC locations between March 2014 and September 2017. The first being a 3-Stage in
San Antonio, Texas in March 2014, a 1-Stage in
Rohnert Park, California between late 2014 and early 2015, another 3-Stage in
Matteson, Illinois in February 2015, and another 3-Stage in
Wilmington, Delaware in September 2017. The last existing Chuck E. Cheese's location to receive a COL stage was in
San Jose, California in December 2018, while the last new location to receive a COL stage was in
Port of Spain, Trinidad & Tobago in February 2023. By May 2015, the "Chuck E. Live Stage," also known as "Stage V2" or commonly referred to as the "Dance Floor," which featured no animatronics at all, a modernized dance floor, and performances only with costumed characters, had been created. In 2017, the chain announced that animatronic shows would be removed entirely in favor of this design in seven pilot locations. After the pilot locations showed promise, retirement of animatronics at Chuck E. Cheese locations accelerated and continued through 2019, by which time 80 of its stores were expected to be retrofitted to the new design. However, in November 2023, the company announced one location in
Northridge, California as the first "legacy and new" store location that would keep their animatronic stage, which is a 2-Stage Cyberamics show. The grand reopening for this store after the remodel was held on November 10 with Nolan Bushnell attending. They would go back on this stance in May 2024 with a
New York Times article announcing a location in
Nanuet, New York as the second "legacy and new" store. Nanuet has a Studio 'C' 2000, 16M stage. The grand reopening was held on July 18. In May 2024, the animatronic shows were reported to have been set to be phased out by the end of 2024, with all but two venues discontinuing their performances, the Northridge, California and Nanuet, New York locations. The decision aligned with Chuck E. Cheese's strategic transformation towards modernization since 2020, including the introduction of digital entertainment features such as screens, digital dance floors, and trampoline gym areas.
Music Another primary focus of entertainment for Chuck E. Cheese is the music performed by the main cast of characters and occasional side characters, which play in the restaurants and are additionally posted to the company's social media channels and music streaming accounts. The main cast of characters perform in a band known as "Chuck E. Cheese & Munch's Make Believe Band", formed in 1990 due to the "Concept Unification" initiative undertaken by ShowBiz Pizza Time to replace the Rock-Afire Explosion. Originally, licensed cover songs were used, alongside parodies of licensed songs, and occasional original music, but original music became the only material used beginning in 2014, to save money from music licensing fees, except for occasional public domain songs such as
"Bingo" and "
Deck the Halls". In 2019, the company began releasing their music on
Spotify and
Apple Music.
Characters •
Chuck E. Cheese (voiced by
Jaret Reddick) is the titular mascot, a mouse who is the lead singer and guitarist of the band. He is outgoing, friendly, and likes singing and entertaining families. •
Helen Henny (voiced by Caroline Taylor == Food ==