Michael S.
Yelp
We (missus and I) walked in without a reservation at 630pm on a Saturday after a long hike, so we were definitely hungry. The waitlist would have been 35 minutes, so it's a good thing there was another option to "share" a table of 6 with another group of 3 girls. Given how hungry we were, this was a no-brainer yes (our orders stayed separate - 6a and 6b).
Verdict: too expensive for what you get, overall "nothing special" (missus quote).
We paid $80 each after tax and tip for the sukiyaki plus "beef" combo (which was $90!), along with a glass of tea and a bowl of rice (both $3.50). The sukiyaki bowls each cost $25 each, presumably to cover the "AYCE" veggie bar (which also has a collection of protein balls - lobster, fish, and beef). The meat portions in the "combo for 2" ($80-$90) are smaller than the individually portioned meat plates, which are also cheaper ($35 each).
Surprisingly the rice bowl is easily big enough for 2, which was unexpected ($3.50). They give you these salad-looking bowls to use at the "salad" area - which is a collection of green veggies, 3 types of mushrooms (oyster, shiitake, and enoki), along with miscellaneous things like tofu, daikon, bean curd,, quail eggs, balls (beef, cuttlefish, fish, stuffed fish ball, lobster).
Ambiance - it smells and sounds like a Shabu Shabu place. What more can you ask for?
Service is generally good - they check on you often for water, broth refills, etc. They explain how to use the heat knob, as well as provide you with a sukiyaki dilution in case the initial amount is too sweet for your palate. You order through a tablet so it goes straight to the kitchen.
Parking is a huge crapshoot in cap hill - street parking is $7/hour, and you probably only need an hour if you're sitting immediately (they're pretty fast with the bowls and the main protein). I paid for 2 hours but technically only needed one.