Showing posts with label misc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label misc. Show all posts

Friday, September 5, 2025

Rare Japanese flyers needed!

I know that the following flyers exist, but I have only ever seen tiny thumbnails of them. I am desperate to find someone who has any of these flyers. I am in need of scans, but will also purchase them if need be. 

Please spread this widely amongst your collector friends, especially your nerdiest and deepest collector friends. These are flyers that even some of the biggest flyer collectors in the world do not have.

These are, of course, needed for my eremeka database project.

ドライブ・テスト35 (Drive Test 35)

イーグルGo!! [イーグルゴー] (Eagle Go!!) by 中村製作所 (Nakamura Seisakusho) & unknown [presumed]

Super Sonic Bomber - スーパーソニックボンバー by 太東貿易 (Taito Trading)

Drive Test 35

Cannon Ball by 太東貿易 (Taito Trading)

Big Bumper - ビッグバンパー by ホープ自動車 (Hope Motors — Hope Star)

Cosmo 7 by 東日本遊園 (East Japan Amusement Park)

Sky Diving - スカイダイビング by 中村製作所 (Nakamura Seisakusho) [presumed]

海底要塞 (undersea fortress) by 中村製作所 (Nakamura Seisakusho)

怪獣ルーレット (monster roulette) by 児童遊園設備 (Children's Amusement Park Facilities)


Thursday, June 5, 2025

Gorgar vinyl record FLAC - 1979 Williams Electronics

Here's a link to the FLAC of the promotional flexi 7" for Gorgar that I uploaded to the internet archive.  This is a promotional flexi that would have been inside a Play Meter magazine.

Download at the Internet Archive.  (link removed at Blogger's request, you'll have to go to IA yourself)

 

Gorgar flexi side A

Gorgar flex reverse (track only on side A)

 

lineage info included:

Grade: VG+
Turntable: Pro-Ject Debut Carbon EVO
Cartridge: Sumiko Rainier
Phono: Cambridge Audio Alva Duo
Interface: Focusrite Scarlett 4i4 2nd Gen
Software: Adobe Audition 2024
Format: FLAC 24/192
Processing: noise reduction (50%/100dB) > click removal (manual) > normalize (-0.1 dB) 


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This blog stands in protest against the USA's horrific policies to try and eliminate trans people from society.  Trans people have always existed, in every society, but this fascist administration has declared a war against reality and says that trans people can no longer be allowed to exist.  Trump's executive orders say that trans children cannot be safe at school, in their home, in public, or at hospitals.  Trump officially declared transness existing as a primary source of CHILD ABUSE.  Trump's orders are a decree to destroy all traces of trans existence from society, to punish every trans person and those that love them, and declares that all trans people are subhuman threats and liars who should not be allowed to exist publicly.  He is attacking children, he is attacking families, and he is delighting in his sadism.

This blog stands in solidarity with all of the youth who are being terrorized by a fascist president who has declared them to be threats that must be eliminated.



Please read:  Utah Republicans ignore study supporting gender-affirming care for trans youth. It's research they demanded

Please read: The New York Times’ Inaccurate Coverage of Transgender People is Being Weaponized Against the Transgender Community

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Coin Journals received!!

The Monthly Coin Journals (月刊コインジャーナル) have hit Canadian soil.

The boxes were 68.6 kg total!  Monstrously huge.  They are now in possession of Detchibe, who has graciously taken some photos for us:


 

Coin Journal issues we received:

1982-12
1983-01
1983-06
1984 5 issues
1985 10 issues
1986 full run
1987 full run
1988 full run
1989 full run
1990 full run
1991 full run
1994 1-6, 8-12

Thank you so much to everyone who donated, with a special thanks to the International Arcade Museum Library Inc and D. Yu who both stepped up with remarkable donations. 18 donors total contributed to make this happen.  Thank you to Sudden_Desu who handled everything on the Japan side and put up with us being many many timezones away.

As I'm buried in the paperwork and planning of this project, I will leave it to other historians to further opine on the importance of these magazines and the impact they might have.  I am incredibly excited to start working through them as they are scanned. I think there will be a wonderful cascade of revelations, insights, and wiki corrections as the arcade and videogame communities start digesting them.

Thank you for trusting us on this.  I'm relieved this has worked out, and I'm grateful for everyone who contributed.  Please feel free to get involved with more projects at Gaming Alexandria! And here's a link to our Discord.  My username is cait001.

 

Scanning plan

Scanning will take a minimum 300+ hours, so best be patient.  This will be an extended project for sure.  If you want to get updates I recommend following Detchibe on BlueSky, or follow their Internet Archive account. (you can also reach them via their Ko-fi account. They will certainly need beverages and encouragement over the next year of work.)

The current plan is to receive a loan of a new scanner with a 2mm edge, one that is made for scanning books.  Hopefully this will come in by the end of June.  Normally with mass preservation it is the time of the people scanning that is the limiting factor, and so scanning is done destructively. But these Coin Journal issues will end up in the archives of the International Arcade Museum Library and so need to be scanned one page at a time.  This vastly increases the time and work required to scan each, so please be patient.

 

Financials:

The total cost on the Japan side was ¥640,837.  Total bids of ¥535,387 plus overseas shipping of
¥105,450.  My original estimates were just north of ¥800,000.

There is a lot of messy conversion between JPY, CAD, and USD funds with each financial product taking their service charges and skimming a few points on any conversion, as they all tend to do.  Converting to USD though, here's a quickie summary:

$4,734.60 USD total cost
$5,163.08 USD net donations received (with our matching donor providing $2,367.30 of that)
$428.48 USD remains to get rolled into the next batch of arcade magazines

We don't have any final bill for duty charges, but I called UPS today and they said the 3 boxes would only incur charges of under $14 CAD each, or $30.66 USD total.  That's pretty great, especially considering I was just hit with a $250 CAD import/duty bill for a package from the USA with a declared value of $300 USD. (mind you, it's never safe to entirely trust UPS...)


Thursday, May 8, 2025

HELP WANTED: please donate so we can digitize Coin Journal issues!

Update: we won all of them!

Thank you all for your assistance.  A full update with accounting will be shared once we have received them.

 

--------------------

 

We need your help to secure some early Coin Journal magazines!

We have a very special opportunity before us: a number of FULL YEAR RUNS of Coin Journal [月刊コインジャーナル] are up for auction, ending in 3 days.  (plus some early standalone issues)

These will be very expensive to purchase, and I am asking for help from the broader arcade collector community.  We can make this happen.  These can all get scanned at 600 DPI and shared with everyone.  But we need to win as many of these auctions as possible.

Current tally: $6021.61 USD
omg.  WOW.

(includes the $3000 matching donation)

Every increase allows us to win more of these auctions!  The goal amount is my estimate for winning all of the Coin Journal auctions.
 
Coin Journals from the 1980s will give everyone a deep look into the Japanese arcade industry.  Researchers extract the game ranking charts, industry figures, interviews with developers and executives, and all of the industry news that would otherwise be lost.  Lost Media fans find endless joy in the freshly unearthed game and prize advertisements. Game information and pictures will be utilized for my eremeka database project. Trade publications like these are filled with information that is not included in consumer-oriented magazines.  These magazines will be accessible to the general public and even if you don't read Japanese (I use translation tools) the magazines are filled with delightful photographs and advertisements.
Some past issues we have digitized: Coin Journal 1989-06, 1992-08, 1993-07, 1996-05.
 

Donating: 

You can send me PayPal at thetastates@gmail.com or if you're in Canada you can send me an e-transfer to thetastates@gmail.com.  You can donate through Detchibe's Ko-Fi account, and add a note that the money is for Coin Journals. Any extra funds would be rolled in to future magazine purchases from Japan.

The auctions

1982-12 https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/t1183908537
1983-01 https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/h1183933116
1983-06 https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/u1183942166
1984 5 issues https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/j1183925104
1985 10 issues https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/q1183920398
1986 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/b1183927187
1987 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/x1183912729
1988 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/k1183918202
1989 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/g1183933015
1990 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/t1183907587
1991 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/k1183918453
1994 1-6, 8-12 https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/n1183916612


Who is asking you for money?

Yeah, what's the big idea with an internet person asking you for money?  If you are new to this blog, please see the SCANS tag and scroll back through the over 100 entries.  Please see the archives of scans done by Detchibe and Hubz.  Find us all on the Gaming Alexandria Discord.

If you've ever wanted to support a significant acquisition for arcade and videogame preservation, this is your chance.

Cost considerations

Prior auction results, for reference:

 
We go from ¥31,500 for single issues from 1976 to about ¥10,000 per issue for the mid 1980s.  That 1990 full run works out to ¥4250 per issue, but that 1992 run was just over ¥1200 per issue.  You can see an inverse exponential scale at work here, with the 1980s and earlier being incredibly pricey.

I made a chart with some rough estimates for these upcoming auctions.  We won't be able to get it all, but we can get some.

A set of issues from the year 2000 recently cost us about ¥17,000 (~$119 USD).  The earlier the year, the more it will sell for.  The early 1990s full year runs will probably sell for around ¥35,000 (~$245 USD).  I imagine the 1980s runs will sell for far more, but I am hoping that there will be some voter fatigue to dampen the prices. 


Shipping costs

Coin Journal and Amusement Industry magazines from the 1990s are huge.  Averaged out over a large shipment, they cost about ¥1300 EACH just to get them here for scanning.  That is ¥15,600 to ship a single year of issues. (about $110 USD)

The 1980s issues are thinner, but will still probably average about ¥900 each for shipping. That is ¥10,800 to ship a single year of issues.  (about $76 USD)

 

Plan of attack

Unless we get a massive amount of donations in the brief time we have, we will have to use the money strategically.  We won't be able to win if spread out bids out evenly, but if we bid live in the order things close, we can roll the money forward from lots we did not win.

Here are the auctions again, but with an image, and sorted by which auctions close first.

1983-01 https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/h1183933116

1994 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/n1183916612

1985 10 issues https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/q1183920398

1988 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/k1183918202

1982-12 https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/t1183908537

1987 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/x1183912729

1991 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/k1183918453

1984 5 issues https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/j1183925104

1983-06 https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/u1183942166

1986 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/b1183927187

1990 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/t1183907587

1989 full run https://buyee.jp/item/jdirectitems/auction/g1183933015



Tuesday, February 20, 2024

on completing projects

I watched a recent video about the topic of projects being "done", and I want to talk about what it means to complete a project.

I have a long history of working on "projects", and in many ways they have significantly defined my life.  There's been so many, of many different types.  They all have the common thread of "something I want to exist in this world does not currently exist as I need it to", and they all are things that happen over a long time span.

The project that takes most of my time right now is the eremeka project .

That project began during COVID, but also out of the circumstances of going blind due to cataracts.  I had given up on my life of event promotion / activism when I became a parent.  I made a choice to pick up pinball as a hobby, with all the conscious nostalgia of someone settling down in the small town they grew up in. I loved learning to repair machines and was pretty ok at solving electromechanical problems, but my eyes going bad means that era has ended.

A decade+ knee-deep in the pinball world, I have built up an impressive gameroom that covers all of the aesthetics I craved; from across the past 100+ years and from 3 different continents.  There are a few things I have my eyes on, but it's mostly all there.  The next step is getting help from friends to chase down the remaining issues any machines might have.  There are 3 pins in the lineup, and 2 will some day be replaced with modern machines, but I am excited to get to the point where all I'm doing is occasionally rotating pinball machines.

The constant hunt? The planning and assembly?  Done.  We're now at the long tail of that project, the maintenance phase. A few more rare things on the horizon, but they will take much patience.  No more tinkering, I've said goodbye to that and made my peace.

My goal for 2024 is to finish everything I can for the eremeka project.  By 2025 I want to have processed all of the materials I've gathered and have that project to be in Maintenance Mode. 

I keep discovering new stores of data, but I feel as though I am finally nearing an end of it.  Eventually, some new catalogues and flyers will be uncovered and passed my way and when that happens I will be overjoyed and process the data dutifully.  There are UK arcade industry magazines from the 50s+60s, and pachinko industry magazines from the 50s-80s, and if and when I get my hands on them I will tear through them and extract all of the relevant data.  But the stores of data I currently have full access to is finite.

I try and approach my research with the idea that I might die tomorrow and anything I haven't shared will be lost. I am not working towards a book or a job or any kind of monetary goal here.  I want to document the Japanese arcade industry to the best of my ability as a monolingual foreigner in Canada. I want to build a small arcade that celebrates the abstract sense of nostalgia I cultivate towards kinetic ball games of all types. I want to scrapbook my emotional world with mixtapes.  I want to build community supports for vulnerable queer youth. I want to build a small gallery of art that fills me with wonder. I want to build community in all of these places that feels safe, nurturing, and benevolently challenging. 

I want to change my immediate world to reflect that which I could previously never find. I want to build a home for my family and friends that can withstand the bastards, if only for a while.  None of this is in isolation, and nothing is forever.

The game tells you when you're done. I have faith that if I pay attention, I will know.

Sunday, November 19, 2023

[admin] comments on this blog

I recently learned that I had not been receiving notification of any comments on this blog.  At some point, the contact email disappeared from all 3 of my blogs and comments were sitting in "Moderation Approval" limbo for over 2 years!

I apologize to everyone for the frustration.  Please do comment and I will do my best to respond.  I can also be reached at thetastates@gmail.com.  Please put 'pinballnovice' in the subject of the email so it does not get missed.  :)

Monday, June 12, 2023

arcade update: new shelf for prewar pins

 I had a custom table/shelf built to better house my pre-war pins.  Check it out!

88" long

I can't stress enough how much my gameroom is a collaboration.  There is basically nothing I could have done here by myself, and I am very grateful to the wonderfully supportive arcade/pinball community and their patience and generosity.

I have many friends who have worked on my machines, helped me move machines in and out, helped me transport machines, have given me knowledge and wisdom, and let me rant in their general direction.  Without all of their assistance, this space would just be all storage.

I don't think I've mentioned it here before, but when I turned 40 I developed aggressive and severe cataracts and went fully blind in one eye before I got surgery.  I healed ok, but in order to maintain my ability to drive I needed two lenses with very different focal lengths, thus making near-sighted correction impossible.   I am no longer able to see things with precision close up with binocular vision.  I might try a jeweler's loupe for the one ok near-vision eye, but I've lost all binocular vision for precision.

The reality of this sunk in went I had to adjust a basic rollover switch on Dolly Parton.  Try as I might with different angles, illumination, and visual tools, I was unable to tend to the switch with any precision.  My days of being an amateur pinball tech are sadly behind me, and that kind of feels like shit to say.  Even the clunkiest of lug soldering is now impossible.

In response, I've obviously leaned very hard into the research aspects of the hobby, but oh I miss the satisfaction of aligning an AX relay.  When the pandemic came, I made sure to come up with a plan to have my arcade stuff taken care of in case I died.  I felt better to have a plan to ensure my family wouldn't be encumbered by a room full of arcade stuff.

I am so very grateful to still be here, to have regained some vision in my eyes, and to have had the chance to build a gameroom like this.  I am grateful for all of my friends and acquaintances in the hobby who have assisted me, and the number of people and what they have done is large.

My collection pays tribute to an aesthetic I had been chasing since a young child.  I am mostly into pinball, but the aesthetic root is actually kinetic ball devices.  Very specifically, this was all the result of being taken to Expo '86 and witnessing the premier of Swiss Jolly Ball by mechanical sculptor Charles Morgan.

It was that spark of joy and inspiration that my collection is in service to.

On to the machines.











Friday, January 27, 2023

some great EM videos - part 2

Here are some more wonderful EM videos I'd like you to see.  (also check my other video post from last year)


A masterclass in restoration, Bill Heatherly condenses 350+ hours of his 1969 Midway Sea Raider restoration into an hour.  Try to not get too distracted by all of the other incredibly rare machines and parts he has stacked in the background.


One of the most remarkable EM machines of the 1950s, come see how a Shoot The Bear works


A rather prestigious collection of British machines.  A few mindblowingly rare machines tossed in with a bunch of the standard fare.


Mike Hasanov is working on an incredibly rare EM machine called The Stripper, and needs to know if anyone else has one of them?  The targeting mechanism is fascinating.


All of the bingos produced by Sigma (シグマ) in the 1980s are rarer than hen's teeth, so I feel extremely blessed to have this long video of Pastel Shower gameplay.


Thursday, October 6, 2022

new project: a foreigners' guide to eremeka arcades - 外国人のためのエレメカアーケードゲームガイド

I'm sure you all read about it already over on nazox2016's blog, so it's probably a good time to announce it here as well.  

All throughout 2022 I have been working to build a list of all of the Japanese eremeka games.  What started with an obsession for electromechanical oddities and candystore skill games has spiraled out of control to document a good chunk of Japanese arcade history.

The history of videogames is meticulously documented by an overwhelming army of historians, but I was unable to find a list online of Japanese electromechanical arcade games, let alone a pictures of most of them.  I wanted a list that showed...

  • a game's name (English and Japanese)
  • the year it appeared
  • who made it
  • a decent photo
That's it.  So here it is:

a foreigners' guide to eremeka arcades - 外国人のためのエレメカアーケードゲームガイド


The bulk of information I used came from Onitama, kt2, nazox2016, and the good people of Gaming Alexandria.  There is a much longer list of sources on the page itself.

This is a work in progress and there is still so much to do, but I decided that once I hit 2000 machines documented I would do a "soft launch".  Scroll down to the heading Current Machine List and you will find a text-only version of every machine documented.  This is very useful for just hitting CTRL+F on to find something.  The photo pages are (currently) split into 6 8 different sections: 

  1. machines before 1970   //   1970年以前の機械
  2. machines from 1970-1974  //  1970〜1974年の機械
  3. machines from 1975-1979  //  1975〜1979年の機械
  4. machines from 1980-1989  //  1980〜1989年の機械
  5. machines from 1990-1999  //  1990〜1989年の機械
  6. machines from 2000 and after  //  2000年以降の機械
  7. machines without any year (please help us find any year references!)  //  年のないマシン(年の参照を見つけるのを手伝ってください!) 
  8. machines with no picture  //  写真のないマシン



I still have a lot of material to sift through.  It is an arduous process and I don't want to disclose just how many hours I've poured into this already, but trust me: it's a lot.  When I finish processing the bulk of the materials remaining, I will probably begin tagging all of the machines so that I can generate pages of specific styles of game.

I hope one day someone from Japan decides to make a site like IPDB.org or similar, but for the Japanese games.  I would be able to offer them my data and research for integration.   Until then, this project is the current best hope for documenting these kinds of machines.

There are currently over 2200 machines listed (2023-05-02 update: almost 3500 machines!).  My passion is for the 1970s and earlier, but the materials for machines before 1974 can be extremely sparse and difficult to come across.  Most of the work going forward will be for machines from the 1980s onward, as that is the bulk of the remaining research materials.


On a project like this I have had to set myself some limits, or else I would end up documenting every single Japanese arcade machines ever made.  Maybe someone else will do that, but the thrust of this project is to document all of the machines that I have some interest in, based on flexible criteria that I apply unevenly.

I am including all of the electromechanical medal games, but not all of the modern medal games.  Why?  Most modern medal games are a video slot machine.  I only care about games that have a physical component, and I don't want to consider "dispensing medals" as a physical component here.  There are many large games like horse racing simulators that I am not including, but I am including some modern horse race games that actually have physical horses moving around the track, even though the action itself is all electronically controlled.

I am not including carnival games where you pick up balls and throw them in buckets or baskets.  These came out of the redemption arcades of the 80s and don't interest me.  But I have included some air hockey tables, as they appeared in the electromechanical arcades of the early 70s.

I am not including horoscope and modern novelty machines like photo gimmicks, but I am including old electromechanical ones.  I'm not including most novelty prize games, like string cutters and UFO catchers, but I am including crane games from the 60s and 70s, and their evolutions into the modern age.  I am also including crane games that have novel physical adaptations that interest me, but that's mostly arbitrary.  Rotary merchandisers go back to the 1920s, and more modern versions certainly have a place on my list.  What I'm saying is: it's not a perfect system, but if I can't defend the inclusion or exclusion of something specific, just assume it's because I was exhausted.  :)

One way to think about it: once we hit the IC age (Integrated circuits) my interest diminishes.  If something is from before 1974? My interest piques.

What are you still doing reading this?  Go look at some cool eremeka machines instead.

Monday, August 15, 2022

some great EM videos

A number of really great EM videos have been posted recently.  Here are some treats:

Restoration (pics) and gameplay of a 1968 Moto-Polo by Sega:


A very special find: footage from the 1976 full motion video game Sky Hawk by Nintendo.  Note the game's data encoded on the bottom half of the screen.


A visual tour through a flasher slot machine:

Randy Senna showing off the first linked driving game, which was built for Disney.

An in-depth tour inside Kasco's 1978 game The Driver



my want list

This has come up a few times recently so I've decided to publicly share my "want list".  I am going to specify the geographic region for each, since most people tend to know machines from one geographic area above all others.


Most Wanted:  These are machines that are my top priority.  I am willing to pay for international shipping to make any of these happen.

Japan - 1977 Vanishing Point - バニシングポイント by 豊栄産業 (Hoei Sangyo) or 1978 世界一周ゲーム (Round The World game) by 柿崎計器 有限会社 (Kakizaki Keiki) or Space Trip by unknown or 1978 Super Cars - スーパーカー by 柿崎計器 (Kakizaki Keiki) 

These are essentially the same game except with different graphics.  Round The  World has at least 2 variant graphics.  There is also a game from 1984 called Mr. ジャンプくん (Mr. Jump-kun) by ケーアンドユー商会 (K&U Company) but it is a full upright, and I'd only want to ship the top half.

1977 Vanishing Point - バニシングポイント by 豊栄産業 (Hoei Sangyo)


1978 世界一周ゲーム (Round The World game) by 柿崎計器 (Kakizaki Keiki)


~1978 Space Trip by 豊栄産業 (Hoei Sangyo) [presumed]

1978 Super Cars - スーパーカー by 柿崎計器 (Kakizaki Keiki)


Japan - any Japanese machines from before World War 2.  as an example... 

omikuji machines (fortune dispensers)

plus, pachinko machines from the 20s to 40s:

pachinko machines with odd nail distribution

I am interested in any old pachinko machines that look like just a grid of nails

any pachinko machine that outputs a coin or token instead of balls

 

North America - 1932 Double-Shuffle by Ad-Lee




Miscellaneous:

  • Research materials on Japanese games - this is all on a separate page.  Catalogs, flyers, and other ephemera from Japan circa 1975 and before are desperately needed.
  • Mills Novelty circular 125 G circa 1906, or any Mills documentation of their "Japanese Booth" or "Japanese Rolling Ball" setup.
  • arcade marquees wanted:
    • Strider (Capcom)
    • Dark Planet (Stern)
    • Ninja (Sega, 1985)
    • Roller Aces (Williams)
    • Super Spacefortress Macross (Fabtek)
    • Time Gal (Taito, 1985)
    • Electronic Fantasy (Taito)
    • Quiz Dragon (Capcom)
    • plus a few more, message me for a full list
  • pinball backglasses wanted:
    • Women's-Lib (Sega)
    • Fairy (Playmatic)
    • Star-Jet (1963, Bally)
    • Flip A Card / Card Trix (1970, Gottlieb)
    • Star Trek (1971, Gottlieb)

    Tuesday, March 22, 2022

    roadtrip pickups

    Alouette is an institution for arcade operators in the Montreal area and they announced they were doing a big parts blowout sale.  We managed to turn it into a mini family vacation, but that also included a trip to the warehouse, a stop at a friends' place on the way for a few more pickups, and some stuff that other people were holding on for me migrated to the warehouse as well.

    There is a bit of an indie pinball/arcade railroad of people are Toronto / Ottawa / Montreal.  Enthusiasts that are willing to pay it forward and help other operators / collectors / restorers in the arcade world.  It is always heartening to experience that kind of mutual enthusiasm, both in how we help each other, and the shared joys of sifting through endless parts shelves.

    I am not going in to the full play-by-play, but here is just a bunch of stuff I picked up on the road


    Thursday, March 17, 2022

    not-quite-pinball soundtrack!

     Did you go through all of the pinball soundtracks?

    Now it's time to enjoy an extremely rare Namco CD with sounds from their wackier elecmeca games.


    ナムコ エレメカ大百科 (Namco Elemecha Daihyakka) from 1996

    Hop on over to 765スタイル to grab the perfect FLAC rip!
    Full scans are available too.

    My favourites:

    • track 9 - サブマリン (Submarine)
    • track 12 - シュータウェイ (Shoot Away)
    • track 3 - おっきなゾウさん
    • track 5  - 功夫老師
    • track 24 - Mr.プロレス (Mr. Wrestling)
    • and the ultimate: track 27 - ワギャン (W A G A N)

    Tuesday, January 11, 2022

    some good follows

    Here are people and places I follow, all come recommended!

    My friend pindude152 is one of the best EM techs in all of Canada, and puts immense care in to bringing machines back to life.  His work is awe-inspiring and his collection spans an incredible assortment of EM marvels you'll probably never find elsewhere.

    Fogh Andersen - the site is in Dutch but fire up your translator because you're about to witness step-by-step restorations of some incredibly cool mechanical machines!

    Nazox2016 gets mentioned a lot on this blog, almost as much as pindude152!  Nazox2016 has provided an incredible service to the world, documenting and sharing information about Japanese medal machines and other EM games.

    Cat Despira's Retrobitch blog should be quite familiar to anyone that has dipped into arcade game history any time over the last decade.

    On しいたけと猫が好き (I like shiitake mushrooms and cats) accs2014 has been putting up scans of hotel brochures that show arcade game rooms from hotels and has been an immense resource for those of us trying to look to at the esoteric world of pre-1978 Japanese arcades.

    The History of How We Play by Ethan Johnson dives deep in to the facts-based history videogames, and is everyone's first stop when compiling "lists of things popular videogame books got very wrong."

    This Week In Pinball is a once-a-week antidote to spending endless hours on sites like Pinside.  Nuff said.

    The Arcade Blogger posts great restoration series of arcade machines, plus they also published a recent book on Missile Command!

    I spend a bunch of time on Discord doing research stuff, and there are 3 I want to highlight:

    1. Gaming Alexandria - video + arcade game history nerds united
    2. For Amusement Only - the server for that EM Bingo + Pinball podcast we all know and love!
    3. PWN - Pinball Women & Nonbinary - a fresh-faced discord that is currently low traffic, for cis, trans, non-binary, two-spirited, and self-identified women and non-binary pinball fans


    Wednesday, December 8, 2021

    the 6 most useful tools (I never knew I needed)

    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