Check this amazing pachinko print you can purchase: "Pachinko I (For Lee)" by Jessica Seamans via LandLand
"Pachinko I (For Lee)" by Jessica Seamans |
Check this amazing pachinko print you can purchase: "Pachinko I (For Lee)" by Jessica Seamans via LandLand
"Pachinko I (For Lee)" by Jessica Seamans |
it was a lot |
I'm not a super hands-on technical person, and mostly have learned how to repair stuff as I go, and perhaps not to the standards of a someone you might describe as "competent". I don't have a "workshop" space, and tend to just fix stuff on my couch and/or coffee table when needed.
For working on random coin-op, here are the 6 tools I appreciate the most, but which I hadn't realized I'd need when I started:
1) digital micrometer 2) leaf switch adjuster 3) telescoping magnet 4) angled-wedge lifter thing that kind of looks like a screwdriver? Also has a magnetic tip. 5) dental pick |
6) wood clamps |
Here is a very short article by Ed Nickels, published by the Association for Games & Puzzles International (AGPI) Quarterly. It can still be seen online in the Spring 2008 issue (Vol 10 No. 1) but I am including it here just in case that site goes offline some day.
I very much appreciate the breezy tone that loops in Bowls from ancient Egypt and 14th century Paille Maille. The quick sentence that connects Bowls and nine hole bagatelle!
It hits lot of salient historical notes without dwelling on aristocratic France as some magical womb of pinball.
It is excerpted from his speech at 2007's Pinball Expo. I am very grateful for Pinball News for sharing the audio from the presentation (mp3).
Ed Nickels at Pinball Expo 2007 - via pinballnews |
2016-01-16 bagatelle exhibit note in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch |
I finally found a high quality transfer of this gem!
1966 - 黒い賭博師 悪魔の左手 / Kuroi Tobakushi: Akuma no Hidarite (The Black Gambler - Devil's Left Hand) |
(Be sure to check the other arcade explorations, especially if you're as interested in old Japanese games as I am.)
I recommend this blog post Top 5 Nikkatsu Spy Films (feat: Kobayashi Akira) (archive) for a bit more context on the film.
Games like Pigeon Hole come up a lot when researching old bagatelle boards. It was easy to lay a wooden set of gates across an existing playfield to create a new game experience. But I quickly realize that "Pigeon Hole" was just one in a long line of games that used arches at the end of a table.
The idea of shooting a ball through gates on the table is one of the earliest innovations, appearing relatively shortly after billiards evolved from a lawn game into an indoor table game. These games are all billiards variants. Actually, I'm not sure. We have references to trou madam being played in the 16th century just on a regular table, so who knows. There were many lawn games where you had to pitch a ball through a gate, so probably the real innovation of trou madam is codifying the set of arches.
It was these arches, which came up from lawn games similar to croquet and now sit on a table, that I might have to consider the true birthplace of pinball. It is the arches that carried forward through the centuries and would lead to the innovations that gave us pinball. (with a few innovations from co-evolving table game cousins being absorbed back in, of course.) Pinball is the result of an evolution beginning with aristocratic table games, and the trou madam arches are one of the earliest innovations in table games we can trace.
I see a few epochs in regards to pinball ancestry:
1630 engraving by Matthaus Merian shows trou madam being played on a regular table. The balls are being rolled by hand, no maces or cues used. |
1674 illustration showing a gate on the playfield for Port & Kings, showing the use of arches in other table/billiards games. |
1782-08-04 troumadam illustration from Gillows records (from the book A Short Dictionary of Furniture by Gloag) |
new flyer for Marry Computer added to exploring the arcade in Android Kaikader
Lots of new information and pics added to the Tamakorogashi post, basically triple it's initial size now.
transitional electric pachinko machines: check for the entry "Unknown LCD game seen in promo video" and 1977 Sankyo 'Invader'
Added Cambrinus game to the carombolette article.
Expanded the "pin bagatelle" page to include Klondike Pool specifically
Updated on naming the bagatelles to include Klondike Pool.
I picked up this Bally Operators' book and I'm very happy to share it with you all.
It's a 50 page notepad with paper and then carbon paper beneath each page. The operator could fill out the information, do the math, pass the location a copy of the receipt, and keep their carbon-copy records.
It offers a tiny glimpse into the world of pinball in 1938, where payout games were prestigious kings, and most locations would certainly pay-off on a novelty game as well if the cops weren't around.
I do not know where this route was.
I have photographed all of the pages, compiled the data, and will make it available for download.
page 34: Golden Wheel @ Milltown Diner |
WHY DID NO ONE TELL ME THEY MADE AN AKIRA PINBALL AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
yeah they used extra-large pinballs as props |
OK it's appears to be a custom re-theme for a magazine photo shoot but OMG OMG OMG WANT
The machine used appears to be a Buck Rogers, and you can see how they laid art on top of the original artwork in a VERY effective manner:
It is hard to definitively understand the world of billiard variants. The game(s) travelled the world many times over, some names were only used in certain regions, some regional-sounding names were given with little-to-no connection to those territories, and many times historical sources would naively swap names around.
This is another work-in-progress post where I'm going to try and collect some details, but I propose a singular takeaway: LET'S STOP CALLING THINGS "BAGATELLE". Please? Bagatelle is a toy home pinball game, it's a musical number, it's a literal TRIFLE synonym, it's a billiard board, it's an antique pin board, it's enough things. Let's be more specific.
Quick summary of the styles I'm interested in:
9-hole bagatelle / English Bagatelle: long and thin tables where you shoot from one end to pocket balls in the 9 shallow holes on the playfield. These tables come up for sale somewhat regularly in the UK, and the folding versions come up occasionally in USA. You don't often see it referenced as "9-hole bagatelle" but I am calling it that because it's explicitly descriptive.
My entry on 9-hole English bagatelle
Pin Bagatelle / French bagatelle / Parisian bagatelle / Russian Bagatelle / cockamaroo: a slanted table where balls are shot up a channel and then fall down through pins/pegs. Full-sized tables of this type seem to be very rare / obscure, with smaller toy-sized versions being rather common. Features like shooting method, playfield gimmicks, and score holes vary, and I use "pin bagatelle" as an overarching category covering these variants.
My entry on pin bagatelle / French bagatelle
1872 J. M. Brunswick catalog |
1872 J. M. Brunswick catalog |
Carombolette: a variant of pigeon-hole that adds a pin-bagatelle feature on the other side of the gates. These are very rare / obscure. The stopper pictured below would allow the table to be played purely as a pigeon hole table.
My entry on carombolette
Jenny Lind Table - holes in the table direct balls to trough at the front 1872 J. M. Brunswick catalog |
Some other table games:
Toupie Hollandaise: no strong connection to billiards or bagatelle, but I'm including because people often lump these in with antique bagatelles. It has skittles on a flat playfield, to be knocked over by a spinning top. Also exists as a children's versions.
My entry on Toupie Hollandaise
I am so incredibly excited to have received a gift from Kazuo Sugiyama, who before he began researching pachinko's origins and opening the Birth Of Pachinko Museum, is a print-maker artist.
the print is now on the wall |
Kazuo Sugiyama and the print! |
I am very grateful to receive this. It arrived safely from Japan. |
In 1923 writer W.B. Gibson (Walter Gibson! Author of The Shadow!) began a column called BUNCO GAMES TO BEWARE OF. He tapped his own carnival experience to explain the 'gamester' ruses that allows for carnival / fair arcade games to be especially profitable.
These were syndicated in newspapers around the USA through 1923-1925. I have 48 of these articles collected here. (Some of the later prints of them include their "number" in the series, but only 3 have ever had an order number indicated.)
At the bottom of this post I will include more articles on Walter Gibson and include 2 more introductory advertisements for the series.
I found this series while researching tamakorogashi, and a shady American carnival variant (that was based on Japanese Rolling Ball's success) is listed below as "Japanese Roll-Down".
Most of these games survived many decades, if not a whole century. Lots of them are purely mechanical gimmicks but some even highlight the new-fangled ELECTRICITY gimmicks, the start of the electro-mechanical arcade era.
The Wheel Of Chance |
Airplane RaceAunt Sarah's Clothes LineAutomatic Bowling AlleyBall and ConeBalloon GameBaseball RackBeehiveBig TomCandy WheelCarnival ClockCarnival RouletteCats On The RackCigaret Shooting GalleryCoin and the TenpinCountry Store WheelDevil's Bowling AlleyDrop CaseEnglish Pool*Fish PondFlashing FlagGravitation Ball GameHand StrikerHigh StrikerHoop TossingHurdle LadderJapanese Roll-DownKnife RackMarble RolldownMonkey SlatsPercentage SpindlePicking Out The ColorsPop 'Em InRace CourseRed White & BlueRoll-A-RaceRolling Log FaroRoly-PolyShell GameShooting GallerySilver ArrowSpotting The SpotString GameSwinging BallThree Card MonteThree Pin GameThrowing DartsWatch LaWheel of ChanceWhirling Spindle
This one got posted to FB: an operator has attached these "bugs" to the teeth of a reel.
This effectively combines two teeth into one and prevents the machine from stopping in between them, rendering those symbols impossible to stop on.
Back in my original bagatelle posts I had this one table at the bottom I didn't understand, with cast characters standing over gates, and no visible plunger, and no real obvious shooting area.
Turns out this is called Toupie Hollandaise, aka Toptafel, aka a spinning top game from Holland. It apparently has origins from the 17th century, but the larger sized tables were mostly 19th-20th century. It's thematic connection to bagatelle being that it was an aristocratic game played on a custom table surface. No cues, no balls, this game used spinning tops to try and knock down tiny pegs / skittles. It is often mislabelled as "bagatelle" in many of the auctions they've appeared in.
Some tables had bells hanging between gates, which I believe gave points in addition to toppling the skittles. These balls would be thematically similar to the bells in carombolette tables, and pin bagatelles.
This game did offer an opportunity to nudge the playfield to manipulate play, as well some tables apparently had a bell underneath that would ring if you were too rough. An early form of Tilt? (*this needs to be verified, currently hearsay)
I've found lots of discussion of these tables, but very few primary sources. They are still popular carpentry projects, and yes after 400 years they basically evolved in to Beyblades.
pictures via Dead Flip on twitter click through for a short video |