Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1947 July

·Pin Boll
A Major Sp~rl
By James T. Man9an
Director,' CMI Pu&lic Relafions Bureau
The Coin Machin e Industry's m ost g ifte d w riter tells in this
article why p in ball clicks w ith the American people. The
article will undou bte dly become the mos t able defense of p~n
g ames yet p u blis hed. Plans are u n der way for attractive
b ulletin copie s to b e made available to the trade .

Pin ball has suddenly reached the status of a major sport.
Statisticians, in finding out that more people watched basketball
than baseball, that 20,000,000 Americans indulged in bowling, and
that many millions more engaged in sports that most of us con-
sidered trivial and obscure, suddenly published the figure that
40,000,000 people played pin ball at some time or other during the
year.
Then came the . question-can 40,000,000 people be crazy? If
pin ball is as silly, ridiculous, and moronic as some super· critics of
American activities had supposed it to be, why should 40,000,000
ablebodied and unhandcuffed men and women not only take it up
but keep it up?
For a game is not something you just throw at people. They have
something to say about whether they will play it or not and they
are always brutal and ruthless in telling you either that the game is
worthless or that it pleases them. As a matter of fact, a pin game is
not a bit different from a Broadway show. It is made for entertain-
ment and amusement. It deals primarily in the. elements of interest,
suspense, and amusement. Unless it delivers these elements, it
flops miserably just like the poor show. No designer or manufac-
turer of pin games can guarantee in advance that any particular
game will be a hit. He tries to make them all hits, but only about
one out of four reach the "hit" status. He, just like the Broadway
producer, knows that he doesn't know everything about human
nature.
So, now, university professors of psychology, economics, mathe-
matics, yes, even chemistry, have suddenly taken the pin game to
their bosoms and admitted that this' phenomenon is a thing worthy
of their special study. Students have been given the pin game as a
subject for their graduating theses and every week Coin Machine
Industries Public Relations Bureau receives requests from these
students for material with which to complete their theses. Every-
one, who is in any way concerned with the psychology of human
behavior, considers pin ball as a prime object of study.
Did pin ball come of age overnight? Did all this happen in the
last couple of months?
A Fifteen Year Sensation
Pin ball is a lot more than an overnight news story. Pin ball is
actually ,a fifteen year sensation-it has been a blazing success for
a decade and a half, and it is only the traditional slowness of
American critics that suddenly recognizes the true worth of this
major sport fifteen years after it has established itself. But the
pin ball fraternity doesn't feel too bad about this delayed recogni·
tion. Pin ball people realize that it took golf about a hundred
years to catch on, that baseball wasn't really much for its first
fifty years, that all games which Americans take to their hearts
have had to serve long periods of waiting before receiving the
universal okeh. In view of such a condition, pin ball has probably
outstripped every other major sport in speed of acceptance.
Several thousand years ago ancient soothsayers used to select
heavy round stones and throw them up the hillside to watch the
stones roll back downhill and lodge in little hollows and declivities.
If it , was a ten stone game demonstration, the soothsayers had a
lengthy fortune to tell about an individual's future, or a nation's
welfare. Then the game slept for a couple of thousand years, only
to reawaken in the fqrm of "bagatelle" which had quite a run about
seventy years ago when it was considered an indispensable adjunct
of every American horne. It kept on being popular for a couple of
, decades and again faded out.
, Suddenly, about 1931, official pin ball was born in the form of a
coin·operated, completely automatic game. The coin-operated game
furnished the player something that was missing in the machina-
tions of the soothsayer and the bagatelle experts.
Less Work In Playing
Because a coin machine must be entirely automatic, the original
pin games had to be designed so that the board and balls were
under glass, and a new game could be set up fOJ;, play in a second
after the old game was finished. As the player deposited his coin,
he unknowingly dropped the dead balls from the previous game
through holes or gutter traps, and they rolled down a second slant-
ing board lying under the pin board proper into position for lifting
for the shot.
In shooting a pin ball shot, the only work the player has to do,
which is in no way connected with the' game action itself, is to lift
the ball ' into shooting position. This feature of 99 per cent game
and 1 per cent work is a big feature which most sports lack. A
ball player has to do a lot of moving and walking not connected
with the actual playing of baseball; a golfer has to step a hundred
or two hundred yards between shots; but a pin ball player has only
the very light duty of lifting his ball into position before he shoots
it. He doesn't have to work. He has more time to spend on the con·
centration on the game proper. His muscles don't get tired. He
rJoesn't need a strong back.
Pin ball is a clean game. The player doesn't get his hands dirty
because the ball lift and handle are well polished from constant
play. His hands never touch the balls or the board. There being
. a minimum of physical exertion, the player doesn't have to remove
his coat for fear of working up a sweat. His clothes stay clean and
in press. No game ever treated the player with more respect for
his physical comfort and well being. On a normal night in summer
a thousand or more young Americans suffer accidents playing the
universally loved and respected game of softball; the pin ball player
gets all the excitement, suspense and competitive thrills of softball
and never has to see a doctor to have any wounds treated.
Psycholog ists Ask "Why Pin Ball ?"
Now the psychologists are asking, "Why pin ball'?" Where does
this game get its hold on the players? The loose or flippant answer
may be "escapism"-the desire of the subconscious to run away
from the cares and burden of real life and submerge itself in an
absorbing game dealing only in points. But that seems too ready·
made an answer.
I like to explain the widespread acceptance of pin ball in terms
of what I call "hand hunger." Those of llS who do not work with
our hands to make a living, have hands just as hungry and anxious
for work as those of the bricklayer or carpenter. When the brick-
layer finishes his day's work his hands are satisfied. But a sales-
man, a clerk, or an office worker too seldom finds the proper food
for his hands in his daily work. So he takes up a game like golf,
billiards, or bowling to give his hands the expression that nature
demands for them. And hungry hands are best fed when they are
addressed to assignments calling for the use of skill.
In spite of the general skepticism concerning the amount of skill
involved in playing pin ball, I maintain the real success of every
pin ball game rests on its containing a generous amount of three
different kinds of skill.
First, the game must have immediate skill. The player without
any previous experience must be able to step up and shoot a
creditable game-sometimes making a score far better than that
'turned in by veterans. This immediate skill offers the rich en-
couragement that makes new players into enthusiasts.
Second, pin ball has the illusion of skill. Many a good shot in
pin ball (such as many a shot in billiards) is the result of sheer
accident. However, all good pin games ar~ so designed that these
"accidents" allow the player, enough material to claim that the
good result was caused by scientific intention. He kids himself
into thinking he is good, when he really isn't. Of course, the il-
lusion of skill is not really skill at all, but it is necessary in a
good game.
Third, pin games require a very detinite per cent of pure skill.
Of course, pin ball is not entirely composed of pure skill for then
the game would not be practical because the very skillful would
get a great deal more out of the game and the less skillful would
not receive their proper share of pleasure and amusement. But it
is a known fact that many players have developed an extraordilJary
sensitivity of touch; can shoot the ball to travel down one side or
other of the board or the direct cellter; can use experienced judg-
ment in making the course 9f the travelling ball favor the shooter.
Many players of this type constantly produce scores that are far
above average and many a layman gets 'a night's enjoyment out of
watching a pin game craftsman playing for hours, without having
any desire to touch the game himself. It is much the same thrill
as watching a pro golfer or billiard player at work.
They Shoot For Points
The motive of the pin game addict is fantastic. He shoots for
points. He is satisfied if he gets a high score; he is disappointed
with a low one. He loves points more than he loves material reo
wards. It would be difficult to find a game where there is less
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1947
materialism in the heart of the player than there is in pin balL
I know that this is a little hard to believe. The following excerpt
from a Collier's article will give you the attitude of Tex Hughson,
Red Sox baseball pitcher:
"Deep in the heart of Tex Hughson there is a consuming, almost
a crusading, urge to become the champion pin ball machine player
in the major leagues.
"Hughson, a tall, dark, determined party, who was incongruously
christened Cecil in the range country of Texas thirty-one years ago,
trains for this bauble of flickering lights, rubber bumpers and bells
with th e same enthusiasm he expends in pitching baseballs for the
Boston Red Sox.
"In any hotel on the baseball circuit where th e management has
installed these gimmicks, Hughson can be found manipulating the
plunger. Most of his wakin.g hours, except the time spent in uni-
form, Tex passes seeing how high he can run his score without
registering a tilt.
.
"One such afternoon in Philadelphia, while the Red Sox idled
before a night game, Hughson was so engaged when a hotel guest,
ten feet away, shook his head in incomprehension.
"'Look at those ballplayers', he complained. 'Work two hours a
day. Then they waste the rest of the day and their money watching
little balls rolling around a machine.'
"Had Hughson heard the busybody, he would have beguiled him
with a two-hour dissertation on why pin balls are good for the soul,
particularly one belonging to a pitcher."
Or, if you want to see the purest, most wholesome type of game
activity · in the field of recreation, just sit or stand around a pin
game in a hotel lobby some evening and watch and listen to a
group of men playing the game. Their interest is deep and sincere
b~~ond words; they love what they are doing and observing; all
VICIOusness has departed; their souls are laid bare and their souls
will look all right to you!
They have even developed a "pin game code of courtesy" that
is followed religiously in pin game locations in Big City, Middle-
town and Smalltown, U.S.A. When there are many players and
only one table, no one player holds the table too long. It was un-
necessary for us to write Emily Post about pin game etiquette but
we, at CMI Public Relations Bureau thought we would an;how
asking Emily what a player at a table should do about the others'
when others were waiting. We received this typical Emily Pos~
reply:
.
"When others are watching they should be asked if they would
like to play and if they are waiting, then after a game, or p.ossibly
two-depending how long it takes-the table should be relin-
quished."
It is usual, rather than unus'ual, to see a player, deeply im-
mersed and in love with the table, courteously look around after he
ha~ played a. f~w times, and ask the ~nlookers if they care to play.
ThiS man, glvmg up the table, doesn t want to give it up. But he
has so much respect for the appeal of the game and so much
under~tanding of how strong this same appeal is for others, that he
turns It over to them for a few rounds-then comes back to it!
Tens of thousands of times a whole evening is passed by a group of
players, playing and surrendering the table to one another almost
as much interested in the other man's game as in their oV:n. I do
not think any other sport in America can boast of such grand con-
sideration on the part of players.
Pin Sport Thrives on Variety
Of modern pin tables, perhaps 2,500 individual tables have been'
designed and manufactured in the past 15 years_ Each manufac-
~eep
turer is everlastingly trying to get the jump on his competitors by
bringing out something new. Sometimes the "something new"
doesn't click and the fea ture fades into oblivion. Sometimes the
new feature takes hold like wildfire and pretty soon becomes a
standard adjunct of all games. The pin game today is a marvelous
example of action through electronics and the bumping, scoring,
lighting and agitating devices on the tables have developed a
technology that proved indispensable to the Army and Navy when
they caUed on our factories during the war to manufacture some
of the most sensitive and intricate detection devices for attack and
defense.
The uninformed person thinks one pin table is just like another.
The dyed·in·the·wool player, however, knows the big difference that
exists and very often goes blocks out of his way to find the location
that has exactly the kind of table that best challenges his skill.
People who have never played pin ball think many of the latest
tables with their complicated scoring systems are too hard to under-
stand. But if these people will spend a nickel or two to play the
game a couple of times, they will find that their brains have bridged
the chasm from simple arithmetic to calculus in a few minutes_
Playing pin ball produces immediate understanding!
Each indivi~ual pin game contains an infinite variety of action.
It is almost mathematically impossible for two games of pin ball to
give action ~at is identically the same. W. A. Patzer, chief engi-
neer of a member factory of Coin Machine Industries, Inc., studied
mathematics at the University of Bonn, Germany, under Alfred
Einstein and compiled the following interesting figures. On a ltable
having 12 bumpers and five balls, a given player has one chance in
720,000,000 of ever seeing two games with ball action and angles
exactly alike. The possibility of two identical games in every .minute
respect, occurring in succession are one in a vigintillion. That
means 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,-
000,000,000,000,000,000,000.
Tribute to Pin Ball
The .writer of this article has been connected with sports and
recreation for more than forty years, and has held the title of
champion top spinner of the world for thirty-seven years. I have
played nearly all major American sports with old men, with middle-
aged .men, with .young men and with kids. I am not a pin game
~anatI? for t~e Simple reason that it is difficult for me, in the city
m which I lIve, to find a place to play pin ball unless I go to a
friend's rumpus room. I do play the game when I travel and would
like to play it every day.
I haye in~ensively studied the sport since it sprang into promi-
nence m thiS country 15 years ago. I know of no sport that offers
more fun to the American people, fun with not a trace of harm or
danger attached to ~t. A man can drop into the corner drug store
and spen.d a few nIckels and receive a half hour's joyous amuse-
ment, whICh helps distract him from his worries refreshes his brain
~n~ ~ives hi.m a new lease pn iife. The game i~ so wholesome tha~
It. IS Il!lposslb~e for ~ad or vicious thoughts or intentions to enter
hiS mmd while he IS playing or watching it played. It is the
cleanest sport ever offered to the American public.
So, naturally, I get het up when some glib commentator who has
never. played th~ game, and is too dumb to know that 40,000,000
:\~encans l?ve It, casts aspersion~ ~n this sport by trying to infer
It IS. somet~llng other than what It IS. If any critic of pin ball is
readmg thiS, and wants to be fair, all I ask of him is to take an
hour off som.e ev~ning, dr~p into a few locations, playa few games,
and study. PI?- ball and pm ball players. His eyes will be opened
and he Will !nstantly change from a wet dishrag to a raving pin
game enthusIast!
.
PD4ted , , ,
It will pay you in many ways to keep in touch with Ben Rodins.
Every week, guaranteed up-to-date equipment is offered for sale
. at EXCEPTIONALLY LOW PRICES. Remember . .. if I can't
guarantee it I won't ship it!
Write r(JdOIl
A Postcard Will Do
Let Ben Rodms Add
Your name" to
His moiling List
mARLin
Amusement Earparation
412 9th St., N. W .• 01. 1625
, WASHINGTON 4. D. C.
Gottlieb Stars Lucky
Star Shipments
CHICAGO-Deliveries of the game,
Lucky Star, were being made to distri-
butors during June, according to officials
of . D. Gottlieb & Co., and production was
bemg put ' into full swing so that operators
could be assured of full quantities in all
parts of the country.
Dave Gottlieb, head of the firm, said
the trade response to pre-release announce-
ment was very encouraging and the in-
form.a ti~n gained had been of great help
to distrIbutors. The game has a combina-
tion of features which have been gained
by a quarter of a century in the manu-
facturing business, he said_
Lucky Star is described by the makers
as a 5-ball replay game that offers "mete-
oric action" on the playing field. The high
sco:e appeal is featured in kick-out pockets
w.h!ch score. as high as 15,000, giving ad-
dmonal actIOn and the big high score
mark set at 400,000. Replays are awarded
for winning scores.

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