
We tried Tampa's new indoor Nerf arena
That's how I discovered Laser Ops Xtreme Fun Center and its new indoor Nerf arena.
Flashback: Growing up, I spent countless summer nights running across manicured lawns and over concrete driveways with friends, firing foam darts at each other until we were out of breath and out of ammo.
So, the idea of picking up an oversized, plastic gun again with the added benefit of air conditioning seemed like a no-brainer.
State of play: Laser Ops offers a deal that includes arcade games, an hour of laser tag, and a half-hour at the Nerf arena for $37 a person.
I can only take so much nostalgia. So, I skipped the arcade games, which, aside from some VR options, gave off a Chuck E. Cheese vibe.
Zoom in: I ambled into the laser tag room and braced for a horde of children. Instead, I found a group of six adults. And for the next hour, we chased each other in a fluorescent room that soon felt like a sauna.
Just a note — having the hit sensor on the gun, as Laser Ops does, instead of the vest makes you an easier target and the game much less fun. Add weak A/C, and I was ready to leave halfway through.
I found the Nerf arena to be much more fun (and ventilated). The 30-minute free-for-all with unlimited foam darts made for a chaotic yet delightfully concise time.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
3 days ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Origins of Robbie Ray, Giants All-Star? Learning new things, intensity and a Chuck E. Cheese throwdown
It's absolutely the right choice to have Robbie Ray start for the San Francisco Giants on Sunday with the first-place Dodgers in town. It's also too bad fans won't see him pitch in Atlanta on Tuesday evening. Ray is twice an All-Star now but has yet to appear in the event. It's baseball's loss — his flair is tailor-made for the big stage. While the 33-year-old appears mild-mannered with his easy grin and his messy mop of hair, or perhaps just lefty-eccentric with those much discussed tight pants and grunt-tastic efforts on the mound, pitching coach J.P. Martinez suggests Ray has an alter ego. 'I always say he looks like Razor Ramon, the old professional wrestler.' Martinez said. 'I'm trying to get Robbie in costume at some point, I'm going to peer-pressure him into it. And the more I think about it, the more I like play off that analogy, it's such a good metaphor for Robbie because he's actually really goofy, but he pretends like he can play the really serious, aggressive role.' The Razor Ramon — Razor Ray? — comp does fit well with the tight pants. And then there is the Chuck E. Cheese brawl. (In the spirit of pro wrestling, we exaggerate for comic effect.) 'We were in Hickory (N.C.) on my son's 11th birthday, so we had a bunch of kids and all the team over to Chuck E. Cheese,' said Chris Michalak, Ray's Class-A pitching coach. 'All the guys were having a blast, and the next thing I know, there's Robbie and another player starting to get into it, like face to face at Chuck E. Cheese. At my son's birthday party, I've got to break up a fight at Chuck E. Cheese. If I hadn't, fists would have been flying. 'But: Are you kidding me? We're at my son's birthday party — you guys can't just have pizza and go play some video games? You've got to go toe-to-toe …. at Chuck E. Cheese?! To this day, I bring it up every time I see him.' Ray verifies Michalak's account. 'I was 19!' he said, sounding simultaneously chagrined and amused. 'I don't even remember what it was about, but yes, it was at a child's birthday party at Chuck E. Cheese.' Another wild Robbie Ray fact: He played on a travel ball team in Tennessee that featured two other future big-leaguers, and Ray was the star of the show, making for a nice little subplot for Sunday's start against Los Angeles. 'I hit leadoff,' former Astros and A's utility player Tony Kemp said. 'Mookie Betts hit second. And Robbie Ray hit third. Robbie was the best hitter on that team.' This is not something Ray keeps to himself, understandably. 'Oh yeah, I tell everyone that all the time I was a way better hitter than Mookie,' he said. ' All the time.' Betts is 1-for-2 with a walk and a strikeout against Ray in the big leagues going into Sunday's series finale. Kemp recalls being wowed by Ray even before he joined that star-studded club. Ray had previously played for a makeshift local team and, Kemp said, 'When we were freshmen, we faced Robbie in a doubleheader and he pitched a complete game against us and hit a three-run home run. He was pretty much the sole contributor in the game.' Ray caught the second game of the doubleheader, and afterward, Kemp's coach, Steve Ashcraft, approached Ray 'and was like, 'Hey, do you want to come play for a real baseball team? '' Ray recalled. 'I said sure, and he said, 'OK, we have another game here tonight. Come down, we'll have a jersey for you.'' Back then, Ray said, he was a better first baseman and offensive player than a pitcher, but left-handers always wind up getting mound time. As a freshman, he threw 76 mph, but he took some lessons from former Giants left-hander Gino Minutelli and by the time he left Brentwood (Tenn.) High, he was throwing up to 93 mph and had offers from Vanderbilt and Arkansas. 'I didn't have a super max-effort delivery, like I do now, I was kind of all arm,' Ray said. 'It was sort of just sling it in there.' Minutelli helped him with grips and command, and Ray had a big 12-6 curveball and a changeup to go along with the fastball. 'We had some good battles,' said Kemp, who went to local rival Centennial High. 'He was a goofy kid who didn't take himself too seriously, but his mentality was different. He wanted to have fun but he also worked really hard. He had that on-off switch. That's what made him so good.' A year after the Nationals drafted Ray in the 12 th round in 2011, he added a slider, which he honed over the next three years, ultimately ditching the curveball and replacing it with a knuckle curve in 2017. 'Robbie's always working,' said Michalak, recalling how amped Ray was about working on a new hand position for a pitch before his final start of the year in the Carolina League. 'It was a meaningless bullpen session and everyone else was thinking about going home, and here's Robbie still trying to find something to get better. His determination is his best asset.' The piece de resistance in Ray's quest to become a frontline starter stemmed from a disastrous warmup session before a 2017 start in Miami pitching for the Diamondbacks. Ray lost the zone entirely, and pitching coach Mike Butcher had to think on the fly. 'They were getting relievers warmed up quick, it was so bad,' Ray said. 'My last pitch went over the backstop and into the stands. Mike walked in from the bullpen with me and said, 'I want you to try something: Throw max effort, every pitch, for as long as you can. Just give us everything you can.'' That game is best known for giving rise to the Robbie Ray Grunt. ('It just came out!' he said. 'I don't know why.') But the more important development was that going full-bore suited Ray perfectly. 'He was all over the place, and I was like, 'Robbie, just throw the freaking s--- out of it, man, just turn it loose' ' Butcher said. 'And he gets back on the mound, and he is grunting like Steffi Graf or Monica Seles in the U.S. Open. I was like, 'This is pretty loud, but he's blowing guys away.' Every single pitch was big, like 97-98 with a power slider. He'd just figured it out.' That same year, Ray was hit on the side of the head by a 108 mph liner off Luke Voit's bat, a scary moment that left him in a heap and bleeding; he got off the field under his own power but was wobbly and was diagnosed with a concussion. 'My ears were ringing, it took a minute for me to be able to hear everybody, but I knew I was OK,' he said. Even so, the first time back out after taking a drive off the head can be hairy, and the Diamondbacks sent Ray to their minor-league complex to get past any nerves. 'They set the machine to just fire balls at me on the mound,' said Ray, who now wears a protective insert inside his cap. 'Of course my first game back, I took a line drive off the shin very first thing.' The changeup was a work in progress for a long time until his well-publicized call to fellow All-Star Tarik Skubal last winter to get tips; adding that pitch sent this season into overdrive. Ray has gone from throwing changeups less than 4% of the time to 13%, and opponents are hitting just .220 against it — and it makes his fastball (.200 average against) and slider (.170) all the better. 'The changeup is just another level to his game,' Martinez said. 'We have a running joke — if he throws a changeup and a guy swings, we look at each other and we go (mimics talking behind his hand) 'Not a heater! ,' because guys are always going to be on his fastball as much as they can because it's such a good fastball.' Ray won the AL Cy Young award with Toronto in 2021 using his fastball 62% of the time, and now, after adding the changeup, he's down to about 53% fastballs and is again putting up All-Star numbers just two years removed from Tommy John surgery that included a flexor-tendon repair. It usually takes pitchers about two years to return to close to full effectiveness, but in Ray's case, he's even better — his ERA to is 2.63 compared to 2.84. When Ray felt the flexor tendon blow in the second inning of a game with Seattle on March 31, 2023, he showed some max-effort grit. Though the elbow was toast, he worked two more innings. 'I knew it popped, it felt like somebody took a knife and was grinding my elbow, but I thought, 'If I come out now, I'm going to bury our bullpen. I've got to get as deep as I can into this game,' ' he said. 'I couldn't make it worse, the damage was done. So I started throwing pancakes.' He walked five and gave up three earned runs but accomplished his goal, Seattle only needed to use three relievers. In early May, he underwent surgery and that offseason, the Mariners dealt him to the Giants for Anthony DeSclafani, Mitch Haniger and cash; the Giants, who had talked to Ray when he was a free agent, were willing to wait for Ray to recover fully, and now the team has him through 2026. 'It's super-cool that Robbie is constantly adapting,' said Curt Casali, who caught Ray in Seattle and San Francisco. 'He's always been just a pro's pro, but he's got some snark to him — he's not afraid to talk s--- and I love that. Robbie always stays true to himself. 'You have to be very confident and in touch with your own game to be able to be that good for multiple teams and he's in that upper echelon.' Butcher recalls once asking Ray if he wanted to be good, or if he wanted to be great. 'I said, 'There are a lot of good players in this league, but do you want to be a dude? Do you want to be an All-Star, a Hall of Famer? '' Butcher said. 'He checked all the boxes. He wants to be great. He wants to be the best left-handed pitcher in the game, he wants strikeout titles. 'He knows what he wants to be and how he's going to get there. He could win a Cy Young every year, he's that good.'
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Yahoo
Kenny Rogers' Twin Sons Justin and Jordan Are All Grown Up in Rare Photo from Their 21st Birthday: 'Impossible to Believe'
Kenny Rogers' sons are all grown up! The late country singer's team shared a photo on his Instagram on Tuesday, July 8, in honor of Rogers' twin sons Justin and Jordan turning 21. In the photo, the two could be seen sitting behind two matching chocolate cakes, which had an Oreo cookie in the center and candles that denoted the year they were turning. In the rare photo, the twins smiled next to each other as their mom, Wanda Miller, stood behind them, smiling. "It's virtually impossible to believe, but Kenny & Wanda's wonderful young men, Justin & Jordan, celebrated the Big 21 yesterday!" the caption read. "Please join us in wishing them an incredible year and long, healthy, prosperous lives for decades to come! -Team KR." Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Rogers is a dad of five. Alongside his twin sons, he shares Carole Lynn Rogers, 66, with ex-wife Janice Gordon; Kenny Rogers Jr., 61, with ex-wife Margo Anderson; and Christopher Cody Rogers, 43, with ex-wife Marianne Gordon. Back in 2023, Justin and Jordan spoke with PEOPLE about the loss of their beloved father and how they keep his memory alive. 'I used to be bullied a lot. I'd come home crying and my dad would say, 'Just keep being yourself. You're very funny,' ' said Jordan. 'Every day I still live up to that.' The twins were just 16 years old when the singer, 81, died in March 2020. In the years since, they've maintained the traditions they established together, like Super Saturdays, a weekly boys-only trip that included breakfast at McDonald's, the car wash and a stop at Chuck E. Cheese. 'I remember all the fun memories we used to have at Chuck E. Cheese,' said Jordan at the time. 'We still go to that location and we sit at the exact same table that we used to.' Added Justin: 'I miss everything about him. He was a really fun dad.' In 2023, the late "The Gambler" singer's team shared a photo of his twin sons graduating from high school. "Kenny always said 'Friendships come and go, but families are forever.' Indeed," read the caption, showing the smiling twins in matching purple caps and gowns. "Kenny & Wanda's twin sons, Justin and Jordan, graduated from high school this past Friday. Please join us in congratulating them on this landmark achievement!" the caption continued. "Way to go, guys! Have fun and enjoy the ride…and may all your dreams in life come true!" Read the original article on People


Buzz Feed
07-07-2025
- Buzz Feed
Funny Childhood Misconceptions That Will Make You Laugh
Kids have very active imaginations. They see the world in a totally different way! Of course, this can lead to some pretty funny mix-ups, misunderstandings, and lots of make-believe. Reddit user Night_sky2025 recently asked, "What was the weirdest thing you believed as a child?" Here are some of the wild, hilarious, and wholesome responses: "When I was pretty young, I learned the word 'fired' in reference to guns. I didn't know that it also referred to being terminated from a job. So it was with confused horror that I observed my mom casually inform my dad that her coworker, Jody, had apparently been shot to death at work for her subpar job performance. And it was unnerving how casually my dad reacted to it, with little more than a, 'Oh man, that's too bad.' For quite a while, I became quite invested in my mom's work performance." "My dad was a pilot, so he was gone a lot when I was a kid. My mom often took us to Chuck E. Cheese when my dad was on a trip. I eventually noticed we only went there when Dad was gone, so I asked him why he never wanted to go with us. He told me he was the guy in the mouse costume and was always there; he just wasn't allowed to interact with us. For many years, I genuinely believed this. We laugh about it now." "As a kid, I believed you were supposed to pray to God when you wanted good things to happen and pray to Satan when you wanted bad things to happen. Like, two separate customer service departments." "Endora from Bewitched was real and could see me through the TV, so I had to clap and act super grateful for Bewitched or she would curse me." "Someone told me Canadians eat toast upside-down because that places the toast toppings in direct contact with taste buds. Young me believed Canadians were very clever for coming up with this toast-eating method and would occasionally give it a go myself. I met a Canadian as a fully grown adult and asked him if my 'fact' was true. Understandably, he was politely mystified. " "I believed that brown cows were the ones that made chocolate milk, and the black/white cows made the regular milk. Pink cows made strawberry milk, and farmers had to hide them in their barn because they were afraid someone would steal the pink cows because everyone loved strawberry milk." "That we had two stomachs: one for liquids and one for solids. When people would say, 'It went down the wrong pipe,' I assumed it was liquids vs. solids, not solids vs. gas." "I was told to leave my cuts and scrapes alone because when I went to sleep, little, tiny people would crawl into my bed and build the scabs themselves using their tools, and I'd be rude if I messed with their work by picking at it. I used to want to catch these little tiny people. To be fair, I never saw a scab develop. I'd just wake up, and it would be there, for it seemed legit. Thanks, Mom." "That the new president of the US had beaten up the previous president to get the job. I spent so much of my young life hating Ronald Reagan, not for his policies, because I was unaware of them, but because I thought he had beaten up Jimmy Carter, and Jimmy Carter seemed like a nice man." "So many things. One of my favorites is that my grandpa told me the neighbors behind them were building a shed for an elephant. It was big enough for one, and my grandpa worked with the circus, so it was totally plausible. It's still referred to as the 'elephant shed.'" "My parents told me that TV was black and white before because the world was actually black and white. Then, a colorful meteorite struck the Earth and gave color to the world. In my defense, I was very little." "That there could be cameras in our house filming a TV show like other families (The Brady Bunch, The Partridge Family, etc.)." "You know, in infomercials, when they say, 'But you gotta call right now to get this deal!'? I used to think they kept track of what time their commercials aired, and started a few-minute timer after they aired, and if you called after the timer ran out, you wouldn't get the deal." "I thought shooting stars were make-believe like unicorns and leprechauns. I was well into my 20s before I figured it out. Still never seen one though." "I remember my dad telling me that part of his job was firing people. I imagined him taking them up on a hill at night, building a campfire around them, and lighting them up. I didn't understand why anyone would allow this to happen to them, even if they were bad at their job." "My parents were raised Catholic and didn't want to force it on me, so I never went to church or read the Bible or anything. Didn't want to. It seemed boring. All of my religious influence came from outside sources that I felt pretty separated from, so I kind of didn't know Jesus was a religious figure. All I knew was what I saw on TV and read brief references. Seeing different versions of Jesus was especially confusing because if he were a real guy, we wouldn't be able to redesign him, right? So for a really long time, maybe until I was 11 or 12, I fully believed Jesus was a type of character. Like a wizard or the Good King sorta deal. He was just 'That Brand of Guy.' If you will, an improv prompt, or some kind of role that needs to be filled in for a story. I still think that, but I thought everyone else thought that, too." "I used to believe the 'Gray Pumpkin' would come the night of Halloween to take some of the candy my brother and I collected in exchange for toys. As it turns out, this was just a fun little lie my mom told us so that I, a kid with a severe nut allergy, wouldn't feel as bad about not being able to eat like 75% of the candy I collected. Also, it was supposed to be the 'Great Pumpkin' (from Charlie Brown), but I misheard, so I always imagined a large, gray pumpkin with arms and legs sneaking into our house." "I remember thinking our eyeballs hang by hooks. I don't remember anyone telling me that; I think I just came to that conclusion myself because I couldn't understand how else they are there." "My sister made up a pop star named Rosie. Though I had never seen her or heard her music outside of my sister singing 'Rosie songs,' I was her biggest fan and would love to ask my sister all about her. I was shocked when my sister came clean after we were almost full-blown adults, haha." "That you only had a certain amount of 'voice' allotted for your lifetime, and that's why old people's voices were very soft and shaky, because they'd used up all their voice when they were young. For a while, I was DETERMINED to have a booming voice when I was old, so I barely spoke to 'save' my voice for later." "Have you ever gone on a highway and seen a sign that says 'speed limit enforced by aircraft'? I thought that they would just shoot you from the sky for speeding. It's not like a plane can give a ticket." "That the opposite side of my knees were called 'leg pits.'" "If you play Candy Crush in the car while it is pumped with gas, the car will explode." "If you turn a light on in a car at night, you could get a ticket." "That when you eat, the food would start to fill your entire body up, beginning at your feet. I thought people could cram food into themselves like you shove cotton into a stuffed animal." "The left side of my body was sad because I was right-handed. So if I were eating, I'd always have the last bite on the left side of my mouth to cheer it up, etc." And: "That 'made from scratch' meant whatever scraps were lying around." What's the wildest or silliest thing you believed as a kid? Tell us in the comments or share anonymously using this form. Note: Submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity.