Astoundingly, Astonishingly ... Average.
Although I have nothing bad to say about Pacific Buffet, I can't say anything that makes it really that great either. It is the 2012 replacement of the now-defunct Long-Yun's Mongolian Buffet Restaurant. I am very hard-pressed to explain how impossibly average you will find Pacific Buffet. If you were to rate all 100,000 Chinese buffets in the United States, and then calculate the precise average of them, you would end up here.
They have all of your tired old favorites: Lo mein, sweet & sour chicken, crab rangoon, etc. Another table has the fruit and salad choices, which like any buffet is a roll of the dice for potential bacteria d'jour. There is a guy working the teppanyaki grill (this is a flat surface grill which has an ancient custom for your requests to go misunderstood and to take far longer to cook than you anticipated).
They do have sushi, and though it is limited to a few maki rolls and a few individual pieces, I would recommend the sushi area as the place to fill up. Will you find any of it outstanding? No. Will you find any of it inedible? You shouldn't. Like a science experiment in finding the statistical average, you will find yourself incredulous at how precisely mundane everything it is.
Okay, one thing fun that set it apart - on our way out of the restaurant, my kids pet the horses. They are the concrete horses that Long-Yun's left behind when they had to skip town. As my co-worker Tim pointed out to me, the horses are like a shrunken version of the giant horse statues at P.F. Chang's restaurant. They were downsized to a version that is much more... you guessed it... average.