Xfinity Live! sits at 1100 Pattison Avenue, wedged between the ballpark, the football stadium, and the arena, which is the whole point. It is not one bar. It is six of them under one roof, built so the tailgate never has to end when the Phillies, Eagles, Sixers, or Flyers do their thing across the street.
Most cities would kill for a single sports bar this size. Philadelphia parked one inside the South Philadelphia Sports Complex, a short walk from Citizens Bank Park, Lincoln Financial Field, and the Wells Fargo Center. On a game day the place absorbs thousands of fans in jerseys, and it never pretends to be anything other than a machine for watching sports and drinking beer.
The anchor is the NBC Sports Arena, the central hall built around a 58-foot LED screen that the operators upgraded as part of a $20 million renovation. In August 2025 the complex sold its naming rights to Kensington-based Stateside Vodka and began rebranding as Stateside Live!, per The Philadelphia Inquirer. Locals still call it Xfinity Live! and probably will for years.
Around that main hall sit the satellite venues. Broad Street Bullies Pub leans into Flyers history and pours a deep beer list. PBR Philly is the country side with a mechanical bull and cheap domestics. Victory Beer Hall runs the long communal tables and the draft program, 1100 Social handles the cocktail and brunch crowd, and Blue Moon Bar covers the frozen-drink contingent. You pick your room by the night.
What to order: keep it simple. A draft at Victory Beer Hall, a frozen cocktail at Blue Moon if the weather turns, and a cheesesteak or wings from the kitchen before the crush. Prices run standard stadium-adjacent, so two beers and food lands around $30 to $40 a head. Nobody comes here for a rare barrel pour. They come because there are 30 screens, a 58-foot one in the middle, and a roof over the tailgate.
Who it is for: anyone with a ticket across the street, out-of-town fans who want guaranteed coverage of their game, and big groups that need room to spread out. Skip it if you want a quiet pint or anything resembling a conversation. For the wider field, our ranked guide to the best sports bars in Philadelphia sets the context, and the editorial round-up of Philadelphia's best bars for watching the game covers the neighborhoods downtown.
Best time to go: two hours before any home game, when the complex fills but you can still get a stool and a server. Weeknights outside the sports calendar are quiet and easy. Avoid the place after a playoff loss unless you enjoy a crowd processing grief at high volume. If you want a Center City alternative on a normal night, Chickie's & Pete's in Philadelphia brings the same crab-fries energy, and our full Philadelphia guide covers the rest of the city.
Sources: Xfinity Live! / Stateside Live! (official) · The Philadelphia Inquirer · Visit Philadelphia · Yelp