Desk row
The classic. A wired station in the main row, dual space for a drink and your phone face-down. Sit down, log in, and the day behind you goes quiet by the second match.
clock out. queue up.
for the tired and the competitive alike
Doors open at · 16:00. A quarter-hour walk from your desk, a couple of hours before home. Take a station, take a couch, take a breath.
Tonight at DUSKPOINT
The rush from the office thins out by seven, so the good chairs are open when you actually want them. Come early and it's calm; come at eight and it hums.
· 16:00–18:00 is the quiet hour. Half the stations sit empty, the lights are low, and nobody minds if you just want to unwind for forty minutes without a headset on. Later the co-op corner fills up with people who queue together most Tuesdays and would happily deal you in. Whatever kind of evening you brought with you, there's a seat shaped like it.
Stations
Every seat runs the same specs: 240Hz panels, a wired mouse that never drops, and a chair that forgives a long day. Pick your posture.
The classic. A wired station in the main row, dual space for a drink and your phone face-down. Sit down, log in, and the day behind you goes quiet by the second match.
One big screen, a soft couch, and a controller for two. Made for slower nights, story games, and the kind of talk that only happens sideways while something plays.
Happy hours
· 18:00–20:00
Two hours cheaper per seat, a pot of tea carried straight to your station, and a booking you can set from the office lift on the way down. Two taps: pick a spot, pick your arrival, and the seat holds while you finish the walk over. No line, no scramble — the amber hour starts before you even sit.
Regular evenings
You don't have to plan anything. But if you like a rhythm, these are the ones the room keeps coming back to.
One seat, headset on, the workday sliding off in the background. Come in without telling anyone, leave when you're done. The · 16:00 crowd is small and nobody's keeping score.
Grab two seats side by side and climb together. Split a pot of tea, split the blame for the losses, and let the last match run a little long. Happy hours make the double booking easy.
The end-of-week ritual. Four or five regulars pull the couch corner and a couple of desks together for co-op runs and a leaderboard settled on points, not stakes. Loose, loud, forgiving.
Dusk gallery
A few frames from the good hour, when the amber comes on and the room settles.
Evening FAQ
None at all. Come in the shirt you wore to the office, come in a hoodie, come in gym kit — the room doesn't notice. The only unwritten rule is headphones in shared rows so the desk beside you stays calm. That's it.
Sure. Plenty of people land at · 16:30, clear the last few emails at the bar with a tea, then move to a station once the day's actually done. There's power at every seat and steady wifi. Finish the workday here, then let it go.
Doors open · 16:00 on weekdays and stay open until · 23:00. Weekends we start a little earlier, at · 14:00. Last station login is thirty minutes before close, so the room can wind down gently rather than all at once.
Your seat waits thirty minutes past your chosen arrival window. If your bus runs late or a meeting overruns, drop us a line and we'll stretch it. Miss it entirely and the seat quietly goes back to the room — no charge, no fuss.
There's a rack for kick-scooters and bikes right by the door, under the awning and out of the rain. Fold-ups are welcome inside too — tuck one under your desk if you'd rather keep it close. No car park, but the tram stops a minute away.
Book tonight
Two taps and a name. We'll have the station warm and the tea ready.