Game nights move fast. The first whistle hits, the pace spikes, and dinner needs to keep up. A strong game night meal does three things. It arrives on time. It feels shareable. It holds up through a long second half or a long third period.
The dinner menu at 7C Lounge supports sports nights because the lineup covers quick starters, hearty mains, and easy share plates. You get classic comfort food, plus a few menu surprises, so every table finds a rhythm that fits the game.
For the full list of options and service times, review the 7C Lounge lunch and dinner menu with pricing and kitchen hours. If Wednesday sits on your weekly sports routine, the Prime Rib Night Wednesday dinner deal with sides deserves a spot in your rotation.
Dinner Timing That Matches Game Night Energy
Timing shapes every sports dinner. The menu runs during lunch and dinner hours, with service listed through 10:00 PM Sunday through Wednesday and 11:00 PM Thursday through Saturday. Those hours fit most night games, plus late starts and overtime drama.
A good game night order also splits into phases. Start with a share plate. Add a main when the game settles. Keep a simple option in reserve for the late push.
Fan-Favorite Starters That Start Strong
Starters set the tone. You want options that hit the table fast, stay easy to share, and keep flavor consistent through long stretches of play.
These picks match game night pacing.
- Cheesesteak spring rolls with cherry pepper dipping sauce
- Loaded crinkle fries with bacon, scallions, cheddar, ranch, and chipotle aioli
- Stuffed peppers with ground meat, cheddar, rice, and tomato sauce
- Buffalo chicken dip with toasted pita chips or tortilla chips
- Bavarian pretzels served with a side of white cheese
These dishes do more than fill the gap before the main. They give the table a shared moment, which fits a sports lounge setting where reactions happen in real time.
Wings That Stay Game Night Reliable
Wings belong on sports nights for a reason. They work in the first quarter and in the final two minutes. They suit solo meals and group orders. They also pair well with a wide range of other dishes, so the table stays balanced.
The wing lineup includes traditional and boneless, plus a long sauce list. Options include mild, hot, bbq, honey hot, garlic parm, cajun butter, sweet heat, and more. A sauce range matters during long games because flavor fatigue shows up fast. A mixed order keeps the table engaged.
Pizza and Flatbreads for the Share Plate Crowd
Pizza solves game night questions. Who wants something shareable. Who wants something filling. Who wants a slice between big plays. A fresh dough pizza also holds well while the game stays tight.
The menu includes traditional and Sicilian styles, plus a white pie with garlic and herb oil, mozzarella, spinach, and diced tomatoes. Flatbreads bring a different vibe. The fig flatbread layers fig jam, ricotta, prosciutto, grape tomatoes, arugula, parmesan, and balsamic glaze. The chicken and broccoli flatbread adds roasted red peppers, ricotta, mozzarella, and garlic herb oil. The cauliflower flatbread adds roasted cauliflower with garlic, parmesan, and breadcrumbs.
Flatbreads work well on sports nights because they eat clean. They also split well across a table, so everyone gets a bite without slowing down the game conversation.
Burgers and Sandwiches Built for Big Nights
A close game calls for a solid main. Burgers and sandwiches deliver because the order feels familiar and satisfying, with enough variety to match different tastes.
The burger section includes the FOP Burger on a brioche bun, plus a Smash Burger with two patties, gouda, garlic aioli, lettuce, tomato, and onion. The Bacon Brie Burger brings candied bacon, brie, frizzled onions, arugula, and garlic aioli. There is also a Sweet Potato Veggie Burger with red pepper remoulade, lettuce, tomato, and onion.
Sandwich options keep the sports staples strong. A cheesesteak offers multiple cheese choices. A chicken cheesesteak keeps the same comfort lane. The French Dip uses sliced prime rib with mushrooms, fried onions, provolone, and au jus. For a lighter bite, wraps and panini options add variety without losing the game night feel.
Bowls and Salads for a Clean Reset Between Games
March and April sports nights sometimes stack. A Flyers game ends and a Sixers game starts. Or a weeknight schedule puts two games back to back. Bowls and salads help when you want dinner that feels lighter, with steady protein and balanced sides.
Rice bowls add structure. Options include a Southwest rice bowl with chicken, avocado, corn, pico, black beans, cilantro, tortilla crisps, and avocado ranch. A pineapple fried rice bowl adds teriyaki chicken, peas, carrots, egg, pineapple, and scallions. A ginger sesame rice bowl brings grilled chicken with broccoli, carrots, wontons, scallions, and sesame seeds.
Salads range from a classic Caesar to larger builds. The Cobb salad includes bacon and jerk seasoned chicken. The Mediterranean salad adds salmon with feta, olives, and lemon vinaigrette. These options suit game nights where you want flavor and energy without a heavy finish.
Prime Rib Night and the Perfect Midweek Sports Pairing
Some dinner nights feel built around one feature. Prime Rib Night fits that role. Every Wednesday from 4:00 PM to 7:00 PM, the menu lists a 14 oz prime rib served with a baked potato, green beans, and your choice of soup or salad. The service note lists dine in only.
Prime rib works for sports nights because it feels like an event meal without becoming complicated. It also hits at a time window that fits many weeknight tip offs and puck drops.
Details live on the Prime Rib Night Wednesday dinner deal with sides page, including add ons like mushrooms and onions or a loaded baked potato option.
How the Dinner Menu Pairs with Sixers and Flyers Nights
Game night planning starts with timing. Start times change, travel affects scheduling, and March through April brings heavy slates. Schedule pages help you pick the right dinner pacing, especially during home stand stretches and busy road weeks.
For basketball start times and upcoming matchups, check the official Philadelphia 76ers schedule for game dates and tip off times. For hockey start times and upcoming opponents, check the official Philadelphia Flyers schedule for game dates and puck drop times.
Once you know the start time, dinner fits into one of three patterns.
Early start night
Start with a share plate and a main right away. Wings, flatbreads, or a burger order keeps the meal simple and fast.
Standard start night
Order a starter first, then pick mains once the game settles. A French dip, a cheesesteak, or a rice bowl keeps the table steady through the late push.
Late start night
Start with lighter plates, then build. Salads, bowls, and a flatbread keep energy steady without a heavy finish.



