The 11 Best Chain Restaurant All-You-Can-Eat Deals

If there are four words that sum up the American dining ethos in one fell swoop, they would be "all you can eat." The unalienable right to eat until we burst is, at this point, engrained into our DNA as Americans, and heaven forbid you try to take our plates away before we're finished. Thankfully, lots of chain restaurants have gotten in on the action, and will keep serving you food (or let you return to the buffet or salad bar) until you say when. From unlimited soup, salad, and breadsticks to more than 20 varieties of unlimited pizza, we've rounded up 11 of the top chain all-you-can-eat deals.

The 11 Best Chain Restaurant All-You-Can-Eat Deals (Slideshow)

The buffet as we know it actually started centuries ago as a way for families to display their wealth and ability to put lots of food on the table, and they didn't become restaurant fixtures until the 1940s, when Las Vegas impresario Herb McDonald introduced the concept. The idea spread throughout Vegas like wildfire, and by the 1960s buffets had made their way across America. The "unlimited free food refills" brought to your table concept caught on soon after that, and by the 1990s the "all-you-can-eat" concept got a slight rebranding, as some establishments, looking to lessen the gluttony aspect of the approach, have re-dubbed it "all you care to eat." Ah, marketing.

There must be certain psychological reasons why we're drawn toward all-you-can-eat deals at restaurants. For one, it gives us back a sense of control, which we more or less lose when a restaurant tells us that we've eaten enough. It also makes us feel like we're getting a good deal, which may or may not be the case (in some cases it's obvious; in others we usually feel the need to eat more in order to "get our money's worth"). But any way you slice it, getting an all-you-can-eat deal makes us feel like kings and queens, able to summon more food upon command, as much as we want. And while we might be paying for it later, it makes us feel pretty good and powerful in the moment.

In order to rank these deals, we focused on not only the selection of food served, but also the value you're receiving for your money and the length of availability. But should you decide to take any of these chains up on their offer, remember the one cardinal rule of all-you-can-eat dining: don't fill up on the bread.