Coin Slot

Issue: 1978 May 040

Coin Slot Magazine - #040 - 1978 - May [International Arcade Museum]
PU*U"
BY:
John Fetterman
Steve Young
243 S. Third St.
Velie Road
Catawissa, Pa 17820
Lagrangeville, NY 12540
Phone (717) 356-2233
Phone (914) 2235613
The other day I went to play pinball at a local university. I was
treated to several brand-new games with brand-new problems, several
very old games had seen their last good games before needing a
major overhaul years ago, and a host of recent games in horrendous
shape. They had a host of problems — some out of order entirely,
others limping along with one or two weak flippers, broken contacts;
some sat lopsided and all were saddled with free play scores much
too high for even a game in mint condition. I hopped from game-to
game hoping to find an enjoyable time somewhere, but finally gave
up and left for home. I mentally tallied up how much I had spent
and, surely enough, I spent much more than I would have had the
games given me a reasonable chance to win replays. This would
make the operator happy.
But I also made a mental note not to
return again, more than I'd wished, not just that I had suffered the
disappointment of not being able to play a satisfying game of pinball
all night — and it seems to happen to pinball more and more these
days — the problem was that the person operating those games is
shortchanging an art.
Oh yes, fine pinball is an art, just as surely as the results of any
other action of man can be considered an art.
In all its forms, design,
operation, and play, there is an art to the proper execution of that
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se see it shortchanged. This is
Like all endeavors, it is fr a om
shame u
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especially sad because
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Do / attraction
ww for human beings. In its simplest form-
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Pinball has an
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htt on
rolling balls
a playfield-it grants some satisfaction. Any person
form requiring time, talent, and a bit of the unknown to master it.
with no prior conditioning will find the simplest pinball entertaining.
(c) Copyright 1978 by John H. Fetterman and Steven P. Young.
All rights reserved.
© The International Arcade Museum
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
Coin Slot Magazine - #040 - 1978 - May [International Arcade Museum]
Anyone — take an aborigine from his land, find a well-bred gentleman
with an open mind - and give him a pinball game. The pinball
can make time go away for anyone willing to permit it to do so.
True, there will be some who object to the game claiming it has no
purpose to be inherently interesting. The steel balls themselves fal
ling from one end of the playfield to the other manage to evoke
some universal fascination for mankind.
Fascinating it may be, but it was in man's nature to give even the
earliest pinballs an added purpose as gambling devices. The addition
of a goal to pinball is harmonious with its raw attraction, providing
the goal is within reach but beyond mundane achievement. But
gambling, especially in the highly decentralized form which was in
herent in the thousands of early pinballs, has never been a welcome
activity to government.
For the purpose of this column, govern
ment's constant vigil against the use of pinballs as gambling devices
is welcome, since gambling in the industry tends to stunt creativity
of the nature which most interests this writer.
Pinball today is without purpose beyond its own demands.
There
is no reason beyond the game itself that any money should be spent
off pinball by the player. Any purpose for pinball which is beyond
the game itself detracts from the essence of the game.
Modern pinball is wedded to the replay.
It too is harmonious with
the basic draw of pinball, but is a return which is less upsetting to
government than a non-self-serving prize.
It is the job of everyone
involved with the pinball machine right up to the person who plays
game to make the replay as valuable as possible.
The art in pinball
design and operation is in the myriad of ways to reach this end. At
its best, pinball maximizes both its return to the player and its
return to the owner.
Pinball as an art does not necessarily conflict with pinball as a means
of putting bread and butter on the table as long as the priorities
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use is asked to justify its exis
from economic responsibility;
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tence in quarter n
dollar
Consider that a single run of a
loa installments.
arca
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o
w
given pinball
may cost more than the making of the movie
D machine
w
://w there will be on pinball which enjoys the spec
"Star Wars" —
ttp but
h
tacular success of a "Star Wars".
Economic considerations have
are kept straight.
Unfortunately, there are no patrons of pinball
giving large grants for the advancement of play and removing games
brought about the existence of most pinballs and obviously have a
© The International Arcade Museum
http://www.arcade-museum.com/

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