Even in the wide world of restaurants, there are very few places like Chuck E. Cheese’s, those caverns of mayhem where mobs of children come to play video games, crawl through Skytubes and scarf down pizza amid the cacophony of beeping sounds, screaming toddlers and the music from Chuck E.’s band powering through a set on stage. Every year, some 40 million kids pile into the restaurants to relish in this sensory overload.
Which, for many other kids, is exactly the trouble.
If you’re the parent of a child with autism spectrum disorder, a Chuck E. Cheese’s restaurant is the last place you’d ever want to go. Already sensitive to bright lights and noises, children on the spectrum would be greatly bothered by an average afternoon at Chuck’s.
That fact…
