Showing posts with label Japanese Rolling Ball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japanese Rolling Ball. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 6, 2023

new arrivals: Rollygame & Japanese rolldown

There are still a few goodies from my last trip sitting in my back room.  I haven't had the time and energy to properly affix them to the wall.  Doing so will require moving a bunch of my machines so I can have proper access to rehang a bunch of things.  That will hopefully happen over the holiday break, and in the meantime I want to show off a few new arrivals.


Rollygame

Rollygame
I am very excited about this game!  It simulates playing baseball, in a manner.  The Corinthian craze began in Japan in the early 1930s.  Rock-Ola's World's Series came out in 1934 and it and a few other games had copies made in Japan circa 1934 onward.  We know that 最新式野球ゲーム (state-of-the-art baseball game) came out sometime between 1934 and 1938, that game bearing the closest World's Series resemblance.

It is fair to estimate Rollygame as being "late 1930s", but currently we do not know the maker.  It could have come earlier, as baseball has been popular in Japan for over a century and Rock-Ola was not the only company to create table games with this layout, but we know they were the most famous.

The game simulates innings in baseball.  Using a stick or flicking the ball with your finger, you fire the ball up the right channel onto the playfield.  The board has carved wooden teeter-totters that help advance the balls around the bases automatically.  
Rules I am using: If there is ever an "overrun", where 2 balls end up on a single base, one ball placed on the preceding base.  If an overrun does not double up a base, I am allowing it. (think of errors that allow a runner to grab an extra base!)  This doesn't happen too often.  
Let's look at the writing on the board:
left side: ボール (ball)
フライ (fly)
ゴロ (grounder) 
center: D.P. (double play)
ヒット (hit) 
right: 空振 (swing and miss)
ファウル (foul)
見送 (strike but no swing) 
upper: ギダ (sacrifice bunt/fly balls) 
note: this is written ダギ on the playfield.  Before WW2 text was written right-to-left.
When 3 balls accumulate on the left channel, the 4th "ball" results in a walk: the ball advances on base.
When 2 balls accumulate on the right, the 3rd "strike" results in an out.
When D.P. is hit (double play) I count that as an 2 outs: the ball that landed there, and I remove the batter on 1st base, or the next person on base if none are on first. (If there are no balls on base, I count it as a single out.)
When you get a run or an out, clear the balls from the playfield for the next batter.  After 3 outs, your competitor gets an inning at bat.




Japanese Rolldown

Japanese Rolldown table

Despite the name, the "Japanese Rolldown" was a twist on Japanese rolling ball that was invented in the USA.  It took a game of skill and turned it into a game of chance: instead of rolling the balls by hand, the player would simply lift the hinged bucket at the end, sending all 8 balls down the playfield simultaneously.

The holes on the playfield are approximately 1.5" in diameter, though wider on the holes with cracks.  I have a set of 1 7/8" aramith billiard balls that I had bought from the Alouette warehouse in Montreal a few years ago.  Eventually I might want to try bouncier 1 3/4" balls, so just 1/8" smaller diameter, though it ostensibly plays fine with the balls I am using.

I am unsure what year it's from, but the the "50c to play for 3rd coupon" written on it suggests it was being used later than the 1920s. (When the Japanese rolldown arrived in the early 20th century, carnival games seemed to be 10 cents in the USA. We see this in the early 1920s too.)  I assume that the "50c" price is a discount to entice a player with 2 coupons to continue rolling for a 3rd one to get a prize.  Carnival games would be exposed to the moisture of the air and sunshine, so I am not too surprised to see the cracking there.  
This is hand-painted and could have had the pricing updated.  The writing about coupons looks like it had been added at a later date, though the green numbers look original.  The upper green numbers say "coupon", and the bottom ones have what looks like "MP" on them, probably meaning "Medium Prize", but for the current iteration of the game it probably just awarded a coupon, as per the text on the left-hand side.

the scoring instructions section
Note how there is a fanciful yellow decoration at the center, top.  There is also one at the bottom, center, but it was covered by the "50c to play for 3rd coupon" banner.
This also leads me to believe that perhaps a 29 might have had a conciliatory prize, like maybe free game.  Not any more!
Perhaps the green numbers are all original and there was a Medium Prize and a coupon system?  I am not sure, I will have to find other examples to check against.


From the Bunco Games To Beware Of compilation article, here is a 1924 newspaper article on how the operator can scam people on the Japanese Rolldown: (note: the author refers to the legitimate game of rolling ball as 'Japanola' and 'Japanese ping-pong', two alternate names)

1924-11-16 Dayton Daily News

The alternating arrangement of numbers on the grid (1-6, 6-1) makes it super easy for an operator to deliberately move a ball from one row to the next while counting, immediately adding or subtracting 5 points to the total in a single move.

This seems to be a far too devious move once we consider the math: At the start of the game we have 48 holes (6x8) and we roll a ball and assume there is an equal chance the ball will land in ANY available hole.  All numbers 1-6 are represented equally.
After that first roll, there are then 47 holes available for the next ball, and there is a lesser chance you will hit a pocket of the same value as the first roll, since there is one less of those numbers available.  And so on.  I did not know how to represent this mathematically, so I wrote a program to do this for me and ran is 10 million times.

distribution of totals when 8 balls are tossed with equal odds to hit any available hole

Playing 10,000,000 games we had the following results:
  • Red numbers: 4838, ~0.05%
  • Green numbers: 156095, ~1.56%
  • the yellow number 29: 856894, 8.57
Some jurisdictions had laws against the Japanese Rolldown since it was considered gambling.  In those territories, players would be asked to roll the balls one at a time instead of releasing all 6 at once, thus turning it more into a game of skill.  As the Bunco article above explains, in cases like that a good showman can use the tension to distract a player and alter the ball layouts.
That probably would not have occurred on this table, since many carnival tables are 15"-20" longer.  This version is way more portable, but the balls are closed to the eyes of a suspicious player.

You would not need to manually cheat the player though, the odds are thoroughly stacked against them.  Since the math is simpler with constrained numbers, the odds of shooting an 8, 9, 47, or 48 is about 0.000603% so there's a solid chance you'd never see those numbers come up in an entire lifetime of operating this game at a carnival.

The 6-ball board we see in the Bunco Games To Beware of article would be far more statistically sane.  This board, with 8 balls, is even more of a sinister con.



I also picked up this marquee for 1978 The Driver - ザドライバー by 関西精機 (Kansai Seiki — Kasco).  What it lacks in graphic design it makes up for in "being by Kasco", which just makes me happy.
marquee from The Driver


Friday, December 2, 2022

the teeny tiny table games

There's 10 of them now.  10!


How did this happen?  A Redgrave bagatelle had been on my wantlist for a while.  Then shortly after I discovered an auction in the UK for a scaled-down bar billiards table at a good price, and I had to go for it.  I do not think that the Singer bagatelle will be sticking around.


For the sake of discussing them, I will number them.  Tables number 1, 2, 5, 6, and 10 are all miniature / toy versions of tables that are regularly full-sized, usually 7-10 feet in length.  Tables 3, 4, 7, 8 and 9 are all made for the home parlor / toy market.


  1. Cockamaroo: Seems to have began early 1800s.  Left and right shooter lane, and uses a cue or mace for both.  Place a King Ball at the top dot, and then there are 6 cups to land in on the way down, plus scoring columns along the bottom.
  2. Pin bagatelle with plunger, first seen mid 1800s.  An example of how bells were introduced into the game.  Dual shooting lanes, with one for the plunger, one for shooting with a cue.  There is no King Ball spot here.
  3. 1876 Redgrave bagatelle.  First USA patented coiled spring plunger from the front of the table, the way we now know with contemporary pinball.
  4. Singer bagatelle: different style of plunger to avoid Redgrave's patent.  This has scoring slots along the bottom, a remnant from cockamaroo that would disappear by the 20th century.
  5. 9-hole English bagatelle:  the classic English Bagatelle layout, 1 center cup encircled by 8 others.  Still played within some parts of the UK and USA.
  6. Japanese rolling ball table: by 1870 there were variants of the English Bagetelle table sold that had cups in multiple lines.  In Japan, early meiji era, tables like this were used for ball rolling, and points exchanged for prizes.  This is the birth of modern redemption arcades.
  7. Japanese rolling ball toy:  After the success of Japanese Rolling Ball in the USA, toy versions were sold from the 1900s to 1950s, though only some models had references to the Japanese origin.
  8. Poolette: post-ww2 bagatelle toy from Japan, similar to Corinthian tables popular in the early 30s
  9. 20th century bagatelle toy from the UK.  Corinthian style board, but with springed plunger and bakelite (maybe) plastic surface.
  10. Bar Billiards: supposed "arriving from the Dutch" in the 1930s, bar billiards is still popular in parts of the UK today, as well as in a few other countries.  Sometimes referred to as "Russian Billiards", the game has under-table troughs to bring sunk balls to the labeled point slots at the front.

Thursday, August 4, 2022

The tamakorogashi book is out! ものと人間の文化史 188 玉ころがし by 杉山 一夫 (Cultural History of Things and Humans 188 Rolling Balls by Kazuo Sugiyama)

Look what arrived today!  Last year I spent many long hours as a research assistant for this book and I'm excited to get my hands on it.

Cultural History of Things and Humans 188 Rolling Balls by Kazuo Sugiyama


The cover overlay features a graphic taken from a "Japanese Ball Game" I purchased, and paid to have digitally restored:

go to the tamakorogashi article for more details!


The book is published by Hosei University Press [ISBN978-4-588-21881-1] and is 370 pages of pre-arcade history for all of the Meiji-era fans in your life. :)

My central thesis around Japanese Rolling Ball was that it was the central ancestor of modern day redemption arcades.  It directly evolved into Fascination and Pokerino as electricity became available, seems to have inspired the invention of skee-ball, and was used as inspiration for a new type of carnival barker game.

Documenting the birth of the earliest redemption arcade models is, for me, the most important achievement of this research.


Available for purchase at Amazon Japan, Honto, Rakuten, and other places.



Hey it's me!
This is now the 2nd book from Japan with my name in it :)
But this time my name appears a few more times, and the research I did is spread out through the entire book.

Wednesday, January 26, 2022

assembling the bite-sized bagatelles

 coming to a pinball history booth near you.... someday...


banana for size

Left to right:
  1. Singer parlor bagatelle (spring-loaded plunger shooter, but it's missing)
  2. Poolette (small cue to launch balls)
  3. French bagatelle / cockamaroo (balls launched from left/right troughs using a cue)
  4. 9-hole English bagatelle (balls hit with mace or cue)
  5. Japanese Rolling Ball (balls rolled by hand)

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

Nikkei Voice article on Tamakorogashi

I am happy to announce I have an article published in the Nikkei Voice newspaper.  It is available in their print edition, as well as online:

ARCADE ORIGINS IN THE JAPANESE ROLLING BALL: HOW TAMAKOROGASHI SHAPED THE WORLD OF MODERN GAMING




Nikkei Voice print edition

Nikkei Voice print edition


archived copy


Nikkei Voice framed at the Birth Of Pachinko Museum


Monday, October 18, 2021

on naming the bagatelles

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




Klondike Pool / Tivoli Table / American Bagatelle / Manhattan:
very similar to other pin bagatelles, except it employs a holes and a trough system to delivery the balls to the front.  Pretty obscure, but at least some copies are known to exist.  Late 19th century, and primarily American.
My entry on pin bagatelles includes a section on Klondike Pool







Japanese Rolling Ball / Tamakorogashi (玉ころがし) / Billard Japonais / Japanese Billiards: a long table like 9-hole bagatelle, but with holes arranged in rows and given a larger range of point values.  Typically the end of the table is rounded, but sometimes it is rectangular.  No cue is used, balls are rolled by hand.  Many home-made ones exist due to their ease of construction, especially in parts of Europe where it still has popularity as a fair game.
My entry on Japanese Rolling Ball



Pigeon Hole / Trou Madam / Parepa:  has holes to shoot through at one end.  Many 9-hole tables also had an add-on to make it a pigeon-hole table.  Dedicated tables of this type are very rare / obscure, especially the angled Parepa tables.  Pigeon-hole is more often played on English Bagatelle tables by inserting a wooden bridge.
The dedicated Pigeon Hole tables have a trough under the playfield that returns the balls to the front of the table, same as bar billiards.
My entry on pigeon hole / trou madam / bar billiards

1872 J. M. Brunswick catalog
1872 J. M. Brunswick catalog

Most billiard tables can be converted to a table like this by adding a wooden arch made to fit across the narrow cross-section of the playfield.  The game Trou Madam, dating to the 16th century, can have arches like this, and games like Mississippi are played in this manner.

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



Bar billiards / Jenny Lind / Russian Billiards: Balls are shot from the front and into holes which channel the balls back to the front of the table.  Played with "skittles" (wooden pieces) on the playfield to avoid.  Common, still made and played today.
My entry on bar billiards
some videos on bar billiards

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



Bowling Naco:  balls are rolled down and their angle modified by changing the shooter's angle.  Exists as a large parlor game, very popular in children's toys, and also exists as coin-op games.  Including here because it was made into a coin-op game in the 1930s around the time when pin bagatelle went coin-op too.

Friday, July 9, 2021

Tamakorogashi - Japanese Roll Ball - 玉ころがし

Here I have gathered everything I can find about 玉ころがし (Tamakorogashi or Tama Korogashi) aka Japanese Roll Ball, or Japanese Rolling Ball, or Japan Rolling Balls, Billard Japonais, etc.  Obviously in Japan it would just be called "ball rolling".

picture from Jost & Cie catalog (see France section)

I am told by Mr. Sugiyama that Tamakorogashi was very popular in Japan from 1880-1930, but very little documentation of it exists outside of newspapers.  Game were not considered important back then, and photography still very expensive.  I am hoping that more and more details will emerge, especially documentation of the game within Japan.

We know quite a bit about games from 1930 onward.  We have some scraps detailing the history of bagatelle from the 18th and 19th centuries, but there is a lot to be learned about the role of Japanese game history in that time.
Building on our current lineage, billiards gave us bagatelle which through many twists and turns eventually gave us all of the arcade machines we know and love.  But the lines between 16th century billiards, 1780 France and the 1930s which gave birth to both pinball in America and pachinko in Japan are still poorly defined.  Tamakorogashi is a part of that developmental history, and it feeds back in to arcade history in a significant way.

Quick overview:

1880-1930 Tamakorogashi popular in Japan.
1901-1920s Japanese Rolling Ball gains popularity in USA and Canada.
1906-1950: Japanese Rolling Ball as a popular kids' toy.
1920s variations of Japanese Rolling Ball tables appear around Europe, at fairs and as part of their robust lineage of wooden table games. Names like "Le Billard Japonais" provide the only connection to its heritage.
1930s Japanese Rolling Ball slowly fades from USA amusement parks but inspires new arcade games, and the redemption model it pioneered thrives.

Gameplay:  balls are rolled down a long playfield towards numbered holes at the end of the playfield.  Depending on the total score, you would be awarded a prize of varied value.
Many establishments kept ledgers, allowing players to build on a score to cash it in for larger prizes.  Some places eventually offered tickets for players to track their score.

Legacy: Japanese Rolling Ball might be the very first "redemption arcade" game.  Ledgers were kept for players to exchange for larger prizes at the end of the season.  It was often used as a way to procure imported Japanese wares before import stores were common.  It was (usually) deemed a fair carnival game and not a scam (like many other carnival games,) and many players primarily enjoyed the gameplay.  

We have examples of points being accumulated and stored on ledgers in North America as early as 1906.  This "redemption arcade" template would later be duplicated by arcades for Skee-ball, Fascination, Pokerino, and all the way up to modern contemporary redemption arcades which dominate the industry worldwide.

Many arcade games took inspiration from tamakorogashi gameplay, some of which can be found at carnivals and arcades today.  Outside of the arcade, it was seen extensively in small community fairs and bazaars, and became a popular children's toy.

Name variants: Japanese Rolling Ball, Japanese Roll Ball, Tamakorogashi, Tama Koro, たまころがし, Japanese Ping-Pong, Japanese Bowling, Japanese Rolling Balls, Japanese Rolling Board, Japanese Ball Game, Japanese hand-bowling.
Each instance of 'Japanese' is sometimes shorted to just 'Jap' in old parlance.  In parts of Europe it was called "Japanese Billiards" or "Billard Japonais".

Game variants:  "Japanese Roll-Down" was a game made by American carnival workers to play off the popularity of Japanese Rolling Ball.  6 balls were simultaneously rolled down the playfield towards a 6x6 grid.  While Japanese Rolling Ball was seen as a fair game of skill, the Japanese Roll-Down was a scam carnival game.  It appeared as early as 1910.  (more details below in the Japanese Roll-Down section, and see also the section Beyond Japanese Rolling Ball)