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Omaha Laser Tag Birthday Parties
4 laser tag venues in Omaha, Nebraska host kids' birthday parties — 3 with party bookings confirmed on the venue's own site. The usual package shape: 2–3 games of laser tag, a private party room for pizza and cake, and a dedicated party host who runs the whole show — gear-up, rules, and keeping the group on schedule. Venues are ranked below by local reputation (rating weighted by review count). Weekend slots go first everywhere — party rooms are the bottleneck — so start calling 2–3 weeks out.
1. The Amazing Pizza Machine
4.2 ★★★★☆ 3,065 reviews
“2nd year we had a birthday party there. The food was great the staff were nice and polite. We had a huge problems getting our cards to work it was hit or miss with them working on…” — Crystal
2. Prehistoric Putt Omaha
4.7 ★★★★★ 1,480 reviews
“It's actually pretty huge, I mean it was the old party store "Nobbies" but when you see it in a different way, you think WOW, this place was this BIG??!! First time we went and…” — Freddie
3. Spare Time Omaha
4.3 ★★★★☆ 367 reviews
“Was here to get a tour from Kim Buthe and learn more about this venue. The place is huge and lots of things to do. It's fun and has bowling, party rooms, dining rooms, arcade…” — John
Booking a party in Omaha: the short checklist
- Book 2–3 weeks ahead — Saturday afternoons fill first, and the number of party rooms (and party hosts on shift) caps how many parties a venue can run. A Sunday-morning or Friday-evening slot is easier to land.
- Ask what the package includes. The standard is 2–3 games plus private room time with a dedicated host; pizza and drinks are bundled or added per kid. Ask whether you can bring your own cake, and whether arcade credits or a second attraction come with the package at combo venues.
- Do the guest-count math. Packages price a base headcount — often 8–12 players — plus a per-kid rate for extras. Ask the arena's per-round capacity too: a guest list bigger than a round means the host rotates groups, which needs to fit your time block.
- Mixed ages? Ask about junior settings. If the guest list runs from 6 to 13, ask whether your party's games can run with junior settings or as a private group — lower-sensitivity blasters, host-balanced teams, no random teenagers in the arena with the little ones. Confirm the venue's age minimum (usually 5–7) before the invites go out.
- Handle waivers and shoes before drop-off. Many venues require a waiver per player, signed by each kid's own parent or guardian — send the e-sign link with the invitations. Closed-toe shoes for everyone playing.