Ryan Marsh is owner/operator of Secret Level Up. (Photo: Elizabeth Sullivan

Get ready for Secret Level Up.

This is the new bar/arcade owned and operated by Ryan Marsh that is slated to open in the South Main Arts District. The opening date will be within three and six months depending on permits and construction, says Marsh, who wonโ€™t reveal the address at this point.ย 

โ€œItโ€™s half and half,โ€ Marsh says. The upstairs area is โ€œLevel Up.โ€ And the basement is โ€œSecret Level.โ€

 โ€œThe front half will be the traditional bar. We will have seating. We will have the biggest indoor screen TV downtown: 14 feet by 8 feet. And then weโ€™ll have another 11 TVs in the bar to feature sports and gaming.โ€

They will feature 22 retro console games in an area just off the bar. โ€œSuper Nintendo, N64, Playstation 1, Xbox One โ€” all the older console games will be able to be played.โ€

Skeeball and pinball machines also will be included.

And, Marsh adds, โ€œAll the retro arcade games can be played free as long as youโ€™re eating and drinking with us.โ€ 

The โ€œSecret Levelโ€ speakeasy will feature food, drink, and live music. They also will feature comedy in the basement, Marsh says. โ€œWith local comedians and bigger name comedians, as well.โ€

As for the food, Marsh says, โ€œWe will be featuring barbecue, authentic Philly cheese steak, and gourmet burgers.โ€

The full bar will include super โ€œInstagramableโ€ fun cocktails, says Sullivan Agency Events & Promotions owner Elizabeth Sullivan, who is in charge of marketing and activations.

Decor will be โ€œretro decor,โ€ she says. โ€œAll โ€™70s, โ€™80s, โ€™90s throwback.โ€

This will include VHSes from that time period, Marsh says. โ€œWe will be plastering the walls with those.โ€ 

Also part of the decor will be vintage Playboy magazine covers as well as โ€œold record sleevesโ€ and โ€œautographed pictures of famous movies from that time.โ€

โ€œThe walls and the decor will be bright, fun, and colorful, so the furniture will be muted,โ€ Sullivan says.

Also involved are investors Brian and Adam Leith, owners of Villa Castrioti.

It will be open four days a week at the beginning, Marsh says. โ€œThe hours of operation right now will be 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.,โ€ Marsh says. โ€œFrom 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. it will be all ages. After 6 p.m., 21 and up.โ€

Michael Donahue began his career in 1975 at the now-defunct Memphis Press-Scimitar and moved to The Commercial Appeal in 1984, where he wrote about food and dining, music, and covered social events until...