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The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer, Bristol

18 King Street
Bristol
BS1 4EF
Phone: 01173169237

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Reviews (Current Rating Average: of 10) Add Review see review guidelines


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Steve C left this review about The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer

The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer is a craft beer pub with pale ale, canned lager, sour and stout options, all listed on boards up on the wall to the right of the bar in the right rear corner. I went for half a Lazer Juice… £3.80 at 4.2%, pull the other one! They all taste the same to me… citrus! I’m actually partial to a bit of cider so was tempted by Fanny’s Bramble, but I decided against it because I’d not shaved for a few days. The bare décor and lack of atmosphere mean I’ll not be returning here.

On 2nd September 2022 - rating: 5
[User has posted 5254 recommendations about 5222 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Ian Mapp left this review about The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer

Historical pub that has been turned crafty - taking the worse elements of a crafty conversion. Pumps with no clips. Beer board to work out what you want but the icing on the cake was the urinals converted from metal barrels. Wasn't funny the first time I saw it.

On 6th January 2020 - rating: 6
[User has posted 1338 recommendations about 1324 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Thuck Phat left this review about The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer

A well reviewed pub and with good reason.
On Bristol's lively King Street The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer has been recently refurbished and is now modern gastro/craft beer boozer in style with internal features echoing those of a ship and many nautical pictures around.
We visited on a sunny Thursday evening and the doors at the front were open creating a pleasant Continental atmosphere helped along by the numerous and eclectic clientele. It all felt lively and buzzy and the right place to be.
The modern and on trend beer boards have been described and are still stocked with a wide variety of offerings. I found the smaller board close to the bar much easier to make sense of but making an ale choice from a trendy board rather than a row of pump clips or a chalk board took a bit of getting used to which may say more about me than the presentation.
Cask choices were: London Brew Company Never Mind the Kent Hops, ELB Foundation and Nightwatchman, Vibrant Forest Black Forest Porter and Electric Bear Milk Stout. These are all served from the row of handpumps on the bar and all that we tried were in very good nick although only the Black Forest Porter drew really deep sighs of appreciation.
Twelve keg beers were also listed, these being served from taps along the back of the bar. They ranged in strength from 3.2% to 6.8% and included offerings from Wild Beer, ELB, Kernel, Gloucester, Brew by Numbers, New Bristol, Lilleys, Hogans and Wiper and True. A real selection in terms of strengths and styles with local breweries well represented.
I liked it here for both the atmosphere and the beer - you certainly won't go thirsty.

On 1st July 2016 - rating: 9
[User has posted 679 recommendations about 678 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Gill Smith left this review about The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer

Called in this bar as we were doing a crawl of some of Bristol's finest. A shock to the system seeing the huge bank of handpulls at the front of the bar with no pumpclips, and a row of taps at the back for the keg craft beers. A large notice board gave full details of the available beers complete with prices for pints, halves, thirds and two thirds. Also shown was a brief description of the beers. We managed three good cask beers, but the Crafty Devil keg beer was way too cold for my taste.

On 24th April 2016 - rating: 6
[User has posted 1339 recommendations about 1222 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Pub SignMan left this review about The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer

Clearly a traditional pub in the past, the Famous Royal Navy Volunteer has been given the craft beer bar makeover, putting it in direct competition with a number of other venues on this stretch of King Street. The pub has a slightly unusual layout, with two long narrow rooms, each with their own bar, and a wider rear room more suited to dining. Part of the transition to the world of craft beer has been to paint the whole pub in a fairly unappealing, bland colour scheme, which has sadly robbed the place of much of its character. There is a good deal of seating, with wing back armchairs under the front windows, large comfy chairs and button backed banquettes along the left hand side, close to the fireplace which stands on this wall under a large mirror. Some pillars break up the space a little, especially around the bar area, where a number of drinking ledges have been built around pillars and sections of wall. Some of these ledges had modern snob screens on them for some unknown reason. The dining area to the rear is similarly decorated to the main bars and has predominantly high tables and stool seating, a large TV screen which was turned off on this visit, numerous nautical themed pictures and paintings and a large map of the Severn Estuary. The right hand bar was very busy, seemingly being used for a private function, so I didn't get a good look round, although a quick glimpse revealed hop lined walls, another unused TV screen and more nautical pictures on the walls.
As others have mentioned, the beer range is detailed on a huge series of boards which use a Brewdog-style confusing pricing structure. It also wasn't clear which beers were on keg and which were cask in the left hand bar, which was odd as a similar board in the right hand bar made a very clear distinction between the two. I don't think I've ever spent so long trying to fathom out which beer I want to order as I did here, but I eventually opted for the Siren Undercurrent, which was a pretty decent pint. Other cask options included Siren Soundwave, Wild Beer Wild Goose Chase, Arbor Triple Hop, New Bristol India and Samhaim, Red Ink 100 and Waen Snowball, with a similarly diverse keg range also listed and a number of real ciders also available.
I found this place a little difficult to warm to and wonder if they missed a trick by not presenting a craft beer venue set in a traditional pub environment, which would have made a stronger point of difference from other bars nearby. It worked well as part of a crawl but didn't strike me as the sort of place I'd like to settle down in for a longer session.

On 7th December 2014 - rating: 6
[User has posted 3114 recommendations about 3114 pubs]


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Steve of N21 left this review about The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer

I am sure I visited the Royal Navy Bar many moons ago when it was a traditional but quite tired PubCo owned pub, and certainly parked it in the memory as one not to bother returning to.
Well that’s all changed and the Royal Navy is now a smart Craft Ale pub, spread over two large dark wood floored rooms with a comfortable mix of wooden and leather seating.
As others have described there are 8 un-badged Real Ale pumps and 12 un-badged Craft beer pumps and the main wall of the central serving area houses a large board with the available beers displayed by number.
So you make your choice, go up the bar, pass over the chosen number, and hope and trust that the barman pulls you the correct beer. Fortunately the staff in these places seem to be better trained and have more about them than the throng of minimum wage Eastern European serving staff that Punch Taverns City outlets employ and that was the case here, with advice on the beers and tasters freely offered.
I went for a half of number 12. Which for the record was Siren Undercurrent at £2.05 for ½. And thus we come to the crux e.g. price levels that even make a Londoner wince. However, even at these high levels there were a fair few in, even discounting our number, so it’s a format that certainly seems to be able to attract. Not the type of place I would choose to spend all evening, even when discounting the requirements to re- mortgage, but I would certainly visit again to see what was on and to use the toilets. Yes I can confirm the Gents is probably the best example of upcycling (modern decorating term I have learnt from all those TV makeover shows) I have seen.

On 1st December 2014 - rating: 6
[User has posted 2111 recommendations about 1992 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Quinno _ left this review about The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer

Huge place that has been given the full craft beer bar makeover, reflecting the hipsterisation of Bristol over the last few years. Whilst some of these work well, others fail by being just too ridiculous and I felt that this was one of them. Twenty beers on in total but don’t go to the bar as all the handpulls are unclipped – the range is listed on the wall. Which is fairly annoying but worse is that the craft keg stuff is also mixed into this list and it isn’t immediately obvious as to how you distinguish between the two. After using some Krypton Factor style puzzle-solving skills I deduced which 8 were cask and which 12 were keg (there were apparently also some ciders but by this point I’d had enough of looking). The prices were pretty outrageous, even if some of them are served in 2/3rds or whatever – and being slap-bang next door to a Sam Smiths outlet was a joke even the best scriptwriter would fail to match. I eventually tried a keg Kernal Table IPA and Siren Undercurrent on cask (which was fine but I’ve had it better) and the £4.10 for the Siren was 90p more than I pay for it in my local in Reading. Staff weren’t really up to drill and there was a bit of faffing about amongst some of the teenage girls. The interior is two large blandly-decorated rooms (some naval prints notwithstanding) connected at the rear, quite heavily stripped out and lacking ambience, bar the comfy chairs and fire at the front of the left hand bar. One positive were the gents, which have metal keg urinals so you can literally imagine yourself filling up the Fosters barrel. The Paul Daniel’s of Bristol’s craft beer pubs – did I like it? Not a lot.

On 22nd November 2014 - rating: 6
[User has posted 5099 recommendations about 5082 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Real Ale Ray left this review about The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer

A difficult place to choose a beer from their confusing wall board, after visiting some normal pubs. I thought I'd be a bit clever and walk to the bar and take a look along the handpumps on the bar, to choose an ale, but to no avail as there was no clips to be seen anywhere. Prices here were OTT, so only managed a half of Siren Undercurrent at £2.05. I asked the barmaid why not just call it two quid, she replied I don't do the prices and waltzed off.

On 17th November 2014 - rating: 5
[User has posted 3382 recommendations about 3381 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Rex Rattus left this review about The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer

There's not a lot to add to what previous reviewers have said. The pumps have no clips and you have to resort to the board on the wall listing all the beers available. Said board is ideally placed on the wall as you approach the bar, but would be more useful if it identified which are the cask ales, and one or two of my comapnions thought that having pump clips next to the names of the beers would be a helpful enhancement. There were no beers under £4 a pint, which, based on my two-day pub experience visit to Bristol (admittedly only encompassing 16 pubs) puts it at the top end of the Bristol price spectrum.

The most noteworthy things about this pub were the facilities in the gents, where re-cycled casks are used in place of things usually constructed from porcelain. Despite the good ale selection, this is another pub that I would not seek to re-visit.

On 17th November 2014 - rating: 5
[User has posted 2606 recommendations about 2520 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Just a quick pint, then I'm off left this review about The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer

Upmarket, modernised pub that won't appeal to everybody but at least there is some reasonably conventional seating near the front. Another room is located to the side, with our visit enlivened by a procession of some oddly-costumed people passing through the bar for a private function. Beer-wise, the eight anonymous handpumps and 12 plain craft keg taps allow for a wide range of styles, and my almost random selection of No 19 (£2.05 for a half) turned out to be Red Ink 100 Porter in good form.

On 16th November 2014 - rating: 7
[User has posted 8117 recommendations about 8117 pubs]

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