This a small BW3s.  No windows which is different from the ones in Houston.  It is open on holidays which is a plus.  After dealing with the nuts in mine for the holidays you need a beer or shot of something to forget about  the craziness.  HA
Wings, beer, full bar, burgers, and so on. Â Happy Hour is different here than the other ones I have been too.
I've been here a few times to watch games, mingle, and meet up with friends. Â The food is typical bar food. Â You can't go wrong with the wings. Â There are plenty of large screen TV's to catch your game, and if one isn't up, you can usually ask to change the station to one that you care to watch. Â I usually ask to watch QVC just to see if they are paying attention.
Review Source:I didn't understand the "4" part of the business title until I got to the front door where a sticker informed me that these are all independently run (franchised?) so I was hesitant to enter, but the air conditioning beckoned me in from the heat of a Texas summer...
My boyfriend and I went for an early dinner and it was pretty empty except for a few families and pairs of old men hitting up the beers. The happy hour run from 4-7 PM I believe, but don't go out of your way to get here, there's no specials on liquor and beer is just $1 off (and some special with a pitcher, but nothing noteworthy I thought).
I wasn't very hungry so I ordered the potato skins. They were pretty tasty, as were the onion rings with their special sauce (mayo and BBQ sauce, perhaps?). The bf got a chicken patty sandwich which was pretty tasty, but nothing too special. You get to choose which of the 11 or so sauces you want on it though which was a plus.
We also got an order of 12 wings, 6 were spicy garlic (but I couldn't taste the garlic at all ... must be my Korean tongue, it's not sensitive enough to minute traces of garlic) and the other 6 were tossed in the Hot BBQ sauce (which my bf decided were not that hot after all). Â
I was confused as to how to order because apparently there are 3 different seasonings the chicken gets cooked in an an additional twelve sauces that you can choose from that they get tossed in. The menu features the sauces in a rated scale from least spicy/sweet to very spicy (though the BBQ wings weren't hot, my bf swears that the hottest hot was very difficult to choke down the last time he was here with his buddies getting wasted). I have yet to confirm this.
I also had a sour apple cocktail that was featured as part of a trio drink menu. Decent, not enough alcohol, but tasty nonetheless, although ,it was so sweet it made my teeth feel itchy after I finished it up.
We finished with the apple pie which, I'm fairly certain, came straight from a box to a microwave with a scoop of cheap, very airy vanilla ice cream on top. I wasn't expecting too much because it was, after all, a dessert from a chain restaurant, and they never come fresh from an oven baked by someone's grandmother. I'd save my money and after dinner, if dessert is indeed necessary, hit up a Coldstone Creamery or a bakery with REAL pie.
The interior of the restaurant is split in two; a dining area and a bar/dining area. I think the tables are moved out at night and entertainment can be set up because I think I saw a pseudo dance floor but  I can be wrong about this. There are TV monitors with various sports and "men's" networks on and you can play those bar games if you pester a waitress/waiter for a remote. There is small arcade in the corner of the restaurant but I didn't get a chance to see what was in it besides the ever-present claw machine in front of some flashy arcade games.
The staff seemed pretty young for working where alcohol was served, but they were pleasant enough. It seemed slow because there was only 4 other groups in the entire restaurant but it seemed that the waitress wasn't anticipating the timing of our meal correctly and was a bit surly at times.
Overall, a good experience but nothing spectacular. I'd only go to watch a big game or if I have a hankering for wings.