REVIEW · DUBAI
60 Minutes Game Pass – Game Space DXB
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You land at Dubai, and suddenly the layover feels shorter. Game Space DXB is an airport gaming lounge at Terminal 3, built for turning waiting time into something you actually look forward to. You get access to a mix of gaming platforms, big screens, and staff support so you can jump in fast instead of just wandering the terminal.
I especially like two things: the variety of stations (PS5, PC, and VR) and the big-screen setup that makes couch-like gaming feel possible even inside an airport. There’s also a multi-player vibe with side-by-side seating, so it works whether you come solo or bring someone along.
One drawback to consider is time. At about an hour, it can fly by, and with airport boarding always looming, you’ll want to stay strict about your schedule. Also, this is priced for an airport location, so it may feel pricey if you only want a quick look around.
In This Review
- Key Highlights Worth Planning For
- Game Space DXB at Dubai Airport Terminal 3: What You’re Actually Buying
- Your Hour of Gaming: PS5, PC (Republic of Gamers), and VR
- Those 50-Inch Screens and the “Real” Lounge Feeling
- More Than Controllers: Charging Stations, Snacks, and Breaks
- The Staff Makes the Hour Run Smooth: Jam, Houssam, Mai, and More
- Timing Strategy: How to Avoid Losing the Whole Layover
- Price and Value Check: Is $25.12 Worth It?
- Who This Is Best For (and Who Might Pass)
- Hours, Vouchers, and Flight-First Planning
- Should You Book the 60 Minutes Game Pass?
- FAQ
- What is included in the 60 Minutes Game Pass?
- Where is Game Space DXB located?
- How much does it cost and how long is it?
- Is the lounge open all day?
- Can I use a mobile ticket, and when can I walk in?
- What is the cancellation policy?
Key Highlights Worth Planning For

- PS5, PC (Republic of Gamers), and VR all in one lounge, so you can match your mood
- 50-inch high-resolution screens that make FIFA, Fortnite, and more feel less like a waiting-room distraction
- Side-by-side seating for multiplayer so you’re not stuck watching someone else play
- Staff help that goes beyond pointing you to a console, including setup and login assistance
- Open 24/7 with charging stations and snacks so you can keep going through the day or night
- Near Terminal 3 checkpoints, with practical wayfinding help like heading toward Gate B27
Game Space DXB at Dubai Airport Terminal 3: What You’re Actually Buying

This isn’t a ticket to a tour bus or a fixed attraction. It’s a ticket to a gaming lounge inside Dubai Airport, right at Terminal 3. The 60 Minutes Game Pass is designed for layover survival: you show up, get directed to a station, and play.
The pass runs about 1 hour (approx.), and the lounge has a maximum capacity of 40 travelers, so it’s not a cattle-call vibe. You’ll also use a mobile ticket, which matters because airport time is short and you want minimal hassle.
You can walk in on basically any date after purchase, with the voucher usable 24 hours after you buy. And the lounge runs 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM daily, which is a big deal if you’re landing early, arriving late, or stuck on an odd connection.
Practical tip: if you’re trying to find it quickly, people often point toward Gate B27 as a handy reference in Terminal 3. If you’re already on your way to boarding, that kind of directional shortcut saves real minutes.
A few more Dubai tours and experiences worth a look
Your Hour of Gaming: PS5, PC (Republic of Gamers), and VR

The core value here is simple: you’re not limited to one system. In the lounge you’ll find PlayStation 5 consoles, PC gaming by Republic of Gamers, and VR headsets. That means you can pick what fits your energy level.
Here’s how I think about choosing a station when your time is tight:
- If you want instant fun with minimal setup, pick PS5. It’s usually the easiest for quick sessions, especially for familiar games.
- If you care about smooth controls and you like PC-style play, go for the Republic of Gamers PCs and choose something like FIFA, Call of Duty, or other trending titles.
- If you want a “wow, I’m actually doing something different” moment, try VR. Just factor that VR sessions can take a bit longer than you expect because you’ll want a clean fit and a short adjustment period.
Gaming options you’re likely to see include trending names such as Fortnite, FIFA, NBA, Minecraft, Call of Duty, and DOTA 2, plus other titles depending on availability. Even if you’re not a hardcore gamer, the variety helps because someone in your group will usually find something they genuinely like.
Multi-player note that matters: the lounge has side-by-side seating, so you can do competitive or cooperative play without everyone awkwardly hovering around a single screen. This makes it a better layover plan for families and friend groups than a solitary activity.
Those 50-Inch Screens and the “Real” Lounge Feeling

Airports can be bleak. What changes the experience here is the setup. You’re not gaming on a tiny screen in a corner. You’ve got extra-wide, high-resolution screens, including 50” displays, designed for visibility and comfort.
That matters for two reasons:
- You don’t lose the game to glare and distance. Big displays help you stay focused, even while the terminal environment hums around you.
- It feels like a real lounge. The layout supports sitting and playing for an hour, not just testing a demo.
There’s also state-of-the-art streaming equipment from El Gato in the lounge. You might not use it, but it signals that the space is built for more than casual taps on a controller. If you do stream or capture clips, this kind of setup is a nice bonus.
And yes, the lounge isn’t only about games. You’ll find Netflix and internet browsing available too. That’s useful if you’re traveling with someone who wants breaks, or if you’re exhausted and still want a comfortable place to hang.
More Than Controllers: Charging Stations, Snacks, and Breaks

A good layover activity has one job: keep you comfortable enough that you don’t start resenting the airport. Game Space addresses that with charging stations and refreshments and snacks.
Why that matters in real travel terms:
- Phone battery is a lifeline in airports for boarding updates, maps, and messaging. Charging helps you stay connected without panic-scrolling for an outlet.
- Snacks turn the lounge into a true pit stop, not a stressful stop where you burn energy and then feel hungry and cranky.
One small practical detail from the experience: some staff have been reported as flexible with personal items like coffee, but your best move is to ask on arrival. Airport rules and staff preferences can vary.
Also, the space is designed to work across ages and ability levels, with staff available to show you how to use the setup. That guidance is the difference between a smooth hour and a frustrating one where you spend the first 15 minutes fiddling.
The Staff Makes the Hour Run Smooth: Jam, Houssam, Mai, and More

A gaming lounge can be either helpful or chaotic. This one leans helpful, and the names you’ll hear in the space include Jam, Houssam, Mai, Mylene, Mousaab, Deepa, and Houssan (different spellings show up for the same type of helpful service).
What that usually translates to for you:
- Getting assigned to the right setup quickly
- Help with game selection when you’re not sure what to play
- Help with logins and account access, which can be a huge time-saver if you’re signing into an account on a console or PC for the first time
If you want a stress-free hour, ask the staff right away what station is ready fastest. If you’re traveling with a group, having a staff member get everyone sorted speeds up the fun.
Tip for a smoother start: bring your patience, but also bring a plan. Decide before you arrive whether you want PS5, PC, or VR, because switching mid-hour can eat time.
Timing Strategy: How to Avoid Losing the Whole Layover

Here’s the honest travel reality. Game Space is open 24/7, but your flight is not. Several people have highlighted the same practical lesson: it’s easy to get so focused on playing that you forget you still need to board.
So I’d handle it like this:
- Set an alarm for when you need to head back to your gate area.
- Assume you’ll spend a few minutes checking in, getting seated, and getting ready.
- If you’re on a short layover, treat this as a “last-resort luxury” rather than a risk. One hour can feel like a blink.
If you’re on a longer connection, this becomes a gift. One reason it works so well is that it breaks the monotony. Instead of sitting in terminal chairs for hours, you get movement, engagement, and something to do together.
Price and Value Check: Is $25.12 Worth It?

At $25.12 per person for about an hour, this is not a budget activity. It’s priced like an airport experience. But value isn’t only cost. It’s what you get for that cost.
Here’s the value math that matters:
- If your alternative is sitting bored in Terminal 3 with limited comfort, you’re paying to transform time into entertainment.
- If your group includes gamers, you get a range of systems (PS5, PC, VR), so you’re not paying for one console with one game.
- If you have a long layover, the “time reset” is real. An hour can take a 6–9 hour wait and make it feel less brutal, especially if you’d otherwise spend that time hunched over a phone.
Airport lounges and paid attractions often feel expensive. This one earns its keep when you can actually use it properly: show up with enough time to check in, play, and still make it back calmly.
Also consider this: because the lounge has charging, snacks, and media options, your hour isn’t just gaming. You can watch something, browse, and regroup if you need a break.
Who This Is Best For (and Who Might Pass)

Game Space DXB fits certain travel styles better than others.
You’ll enjoy it most if:
- You have a long layover and want a real break from terminal chairs
- You’re traveling with teens or kids who need energy burned safely
- You’re a gamer who wants choice across PS5, PC, and VR
- You want a social activity with multiplayer seating so nobody is just waiting
You might skip it if:
- Your layover is short enough that even an hour feels risky
- You’re not interested in gaming at all and would rather rest quietly
- You’re mainly looking for sightseeing or a cultural stop (this is entertainment-first)
If you fall in the middle, it’s still worth considering because the lounge isn’t limited to one activity. Netflix and browsing can turn the hour into a flexible hang, even if not everyone wants VR.
Hours, Vouchers, and Flight-First Planning
A few practical points to keep your day smooth:
- Open 24/7: the lounge runs every day from midnight to 11:59 PM.
- Walk-in with voucher rules: after purchase, your voucher can be used 24 hours later, and you can walk in any date/time with it.
- Mobile ticket: keep your phone handy for quick entry.
- Free cancellation: you can cancel for a full refund if you do it at least 24 hours before the experience start time. If you cancel inside that window, the amount paid is not refunded.
The real trick is not the rules. It’s your timing. Decide how much play you can fit without stress, then let the hour be fun, not a countdown.
Should You Book the 60 Minutes Game Pass?
If you’re traveling through Dubai Airport Terminal 3 and you’ve got time to kill, I think this is one of the most practical ways to use it. You get real variety (PS5, PC, VR), big screens, staff help, charging, and snacks, all inside a lounge built for downtime.
Book it if you want:
- a reliable way to spend an hour without boredom
- a group-friendly activity with multiplayer options
- a chance to try VR without hunting for a separate venue
Skip it if:
- you’re cutting it close on boarding time
- you’re traveling solo with no interest in gaming platforms
- you just want a quiet place to recharge and nothing more
FAQ
What is included in the 60 Minutes Game Pass?
The pass gives you access to the gaming lounge for about an hour. You can use available gaming stations including PS5, PC, and VR, plus options like Netflix and internet browsing, along with snacks and refreshments, charging stations, and staff assistance.
Where is Game Space DXB located?
Game Space DXB is in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, with the meeting point at Airport Terminal 3. The activity ends back at the same meeting point.
How much does it cost and how long is it?
It costs $25.12 per person and lasts about 1 hour.
Is the lounge open all day?
Yes. It is open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, with hours listed as 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM.
Can I use a mobile ticket, and when can I walk in?
You receive a mobile ticket. The voucher can be used 24 hours after your purchase, and you can walk in any date or time with your voucher after that window.
What is the cancellation policy?
Cancellation is free up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. Cancel less than 24 hours before the start time and the amount paid is not refunded.



























