Welcome to Reno, the Mighty Mecca of All-You-Can-Eat Sushi

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The décor may be minimal at Hinoki Sushi, but the Godzilla rolls are endless.

Inside this Reno, Nev., restaurant on a sunny Monday afternoon, platters of sushi streamed out of the kitchen like floats in a parade, each roll drizzled with pastel-hued sauces, confettied with furikake or crowned with haystacks of imitation crab. The Godzilla roll — a Reno special overflowing with whitefish, teriyaki sauce, hot sauce, spicy mayonnaise, green onions and sesame seeds, the whole thing deep-fried in tempura batter — graced almost every table. Diners dipped liberally into trays of ponzu, Cajun and honey-mustard sauces.

The price for this spread? $27.99 per person.

The sushi in Reno isn’t about the fish — it’s about the array of toppings, like avocado slices, imitation crab and ponzu sauce.Credit…Emily Najera for The New York Times

At a time when food prices remain bloated, tariffs threaten supply chains and the big casino-town buffet appears endangered — Reno has a thriving ecosystem of all-you-can-eat sushi that, for now, remains relatively inexpensive.

Here in mountain-capped Reno — a kind of Las Vegas Lite, brimming with neon and a smattering of casinos, that serves as a stopover for many travelers to Lake Tahoe — nearly all of the 50 or so sushi restaurants are all-you-can-eat. Limitless sushi has become such a given that à la carte sushi restaurants rarely survive beyond a year, said Mike Higdon, a local food writer and photographer.

Born of the American sushi boom of the 1990s and the value-oriented culture of Reno, where you can still find $9.99 steak-dinner specials, all-you-can-eat sushi has become a city signature, especially as bottomless meal deals vanish elsewhere, Mr. Higdon said.

“There is a lot of pride in all-you-can-eat here,” he added. “We know that we are the mecca.”

With nearly 50 different restaurants, the casino city’s all-you-can-eat sushi market is oversaturated.Credit…Emily Najera for The New York Times

In Reno, you can get bottomless sushi for as little as $27.99 per person.Credit…Emily Najera for The New York Times

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