A viral video has sparked online debate after a woman claimed Dave & Buster’s inflated her tip amount on an electronic checkout screen, showing a 20% gratuity calculation that appeared to be significantly higher than what math would suggest.
In the clip, filmed at an unidentified Dave & Buster’s location, the woman records her receipt and the touchscreen payment options as she finishes her meal. “So the bill is $158 and this is 20%,” she says, showing the screen’s suggested tip of $44.38. Then she opens her phone’s calculator: “But when we do it on our calculations, it’s $31.60.”
🚨 THE TIP SCREEN IS LYING – AND IT KNOWS YOU WON’T CHECK
— HustleBitch (@HustleBitch_) January 17, 2026
A woman eating at Dave & Buster's pulls out her phone and films the checkout screen after a $158 bill.
“So the bill is $158 and this is 20%,” she says.
“But when we do it on our calculations, it’s $31.60.”
Her… pic.twitter.com/HQNBIk5nNx
The difference — more than $12 higher than an actual 20% — quickly caught viewers’ attention. The woman pans back to the register and points out another inconsistency: “And now they’re saying $20 is 9%?”
The video, which has spread rapidly across TikTok and X, has fueled speculation about whether digital payment systems are miscalculating tip percentages or whether hidden fees, taxes, or service charges are being factored into tip suggestions. Some commenters accused restaurants of quietly inflating gratuity amounts, while others suggested the system might be calculating tips on the post-tax total rather than the pre-tax subtotal — a common but often unnoticed practice.
As of Saturday, Dave & Buster’s has not commented publicly on the video or confirmed whether the discrepancy was due to a system error. The company has not identified which of its locations was involved.
The viral clip comes amid growing consumer scrutiny over tipping screens and “suggested gratuity” options that have become standard across restaurants, cafes, and service industries. A recent wave of viral posts has accused chains of “tipflation” — the practice of nudging customers toward higher tips through digital prompts.
For now, social media users are urging diners to double-check receipts before signing. “Always do the math yourself,” one commenter wrote. “The machines aren’t always wrong — but they’re not always right either.”