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No Longer a Relic of Sleazy Bars, Pinball Is Making a Big Comeback
Yahoo News! ^
| Sun, September 7, 2025
Posted on 09/08/2025 4:29:39 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: Moltke
That was the art, wasn’t it? Knowing exactly how far you could go coaxing the ball without TILT!
To: nickcarraway
There is a place near where I live that has about 35 classic pinball machines and 100 classic video games that are all on free play. You buy a "day pass" and get unlimited play of all the machines.
-PJ
22
posted on
09/08/2025 4:59:08 PM PDT
by
Political Junkie Too
( * LAAP = Left-wing Activist Agitprop Press (formerly known as the MSM))
To: nickcarraway
... from classics like Wizard and The Addams Family
Laughed when I saw those mentioned as classics, but on 2nd thought, I guess they are. My pinball days were early 60s to around 1970. All 2 flipper games and slower than games in the 70s and onward.
Recently on a beach vacation, stopped in an arcade to kill time where pinwall machines lined every wall back in the day. Only found 2 pinball machines, was disappointing..:(
Had a "Quick Draw" machine(Gottlieb) in my basement for years that I sold for a thousand to a guy that drove 500 miles to pick it up, he refurbished it and sold it for $1500. Thing was, all the values I saw for it well under $1000, thinking the guy was hired by someone that wanted that machine badly enough to overpay for it.
23
posted on
09/08/2025 5:01:21 PM PDT
by
ratzoe
To: nickcarraway
Not the same without Moonie or Ox.
To: TheThirdRuffian
It part of the return of all things analog Pinball machines are actually digital, made with electro-mechanical switching devices. Those machines are the world's first electric finite state machines.
25
posted on
09/08/2025 5:04:55 PM PDT
by
GingisK
To: ratzoe
What about the Lawrence Welk pinball machine?
To: nickcarraway
Chuckee Cheese when the kids were little then an hour of pinball. Good times!
27
posted on
09/08/2025 5:07:27 PM PDT
by
Menehune56
("Let them hate so long as they fear" (Oderint Dum Metuant), Lucius Accius (170 BC - 86 BC)
To: nickcarraway
Wow Holy cow, some of my best memories are playing pinball. 1973 crusing cross country from New York to Colorado and stopping at KOAs (Kampgrounds of America) and seeing the same women going to same way, OW! And playing pinball while Jim Croce was playing on the juke box, complete, utter bliss, like a dream. And oh, only 52 years ago, good God.
28
posted on
09/08/2025 5:10:55 PM PDT
by
GrandJediMasterYoda
(As long as Hillary Clinton remains free, the USA will never have equal justice under the law)
To: 38special
I don’t know,,what makes him so good?
29
posted on
09/08/2025 5:12:39 PM PDT
by
bigbob
(If thou doth eff around, thou wilt findeth out)
To: Right Brother
I’m sure she hangs out in city bars where foo-foo flavored martinis are cool and the men are metrosexuals. Or just gay. The kind of place that would have a pinball machine, and people drinking whiskey and beer, are “sleezy” to her.
30
posted on
09/08/2025 5:14:17 PM PDT
by
ETCM
(“There is no security, no safety, in the appeasement of evil.” — Ronald Reagan)
To: Pocketdoor
Years ago, I visited the pinball museum in Vegas. I played a handful of machines I hadn’t seen in 35 or 40 years. Plenty of old video games too.
31
posted on
09/08/2025 5:16:15 PM PDT
by
ETCM
(“There is no security, no safety, in the appeasement of evil.” — Ronald Reagan)
To: nickcarraway
Pinball has fascinated me ever since I was a kid. Being born in the mid-80s, I grew up in that arcade hey-day and pinball machines were still quite prevalent then. I remember nearly every Walmart you went to in the early 90s had at least one pinball machine in the lobby, and maybe two.
I’ve loved the game so much that now as an adult I bought my own machine for home. A 2014 Mustang LE from Stern Pinball.
Video game adaptations are also fine, though, and they have come quite a long way since the early days. Simulations like Pinball FX (for Williams tables) and The Pinball Arcade are reasonably good, if a bit pricey (you have to purchase tables in packs). Still far cheaper than buying the real thing.
To: nickcarraway
I lived to find quarters as a kid. Selling bottles and cans. I also worked as a bagboy and made quarters as tips.
I was in hog-heaven playing Magic Carpet.
33
posted on
09/08/2025 5:17:29 PM PDT
by
Dacula
To: Dr. Sivana
Yeah the headline writer was more interested in a hook for the headline instead of accurate reporting. Natch
34
posted on
09/08/2025 5:24:43 PM PDT
by
j.havenfarm
(24 years on Free Republic, 12/10/24! More than 10,500 replies and still not shutting up!)
To: nickcarraway
35
posted on
09/08/2025 5:57:22 PM PDT
by
Bonemaker
(invictus maneo)
To: Dr. Sivana
The local skating rink had several machines. Always occupied.
36
posted on
09/08/2025 5:59:19 PM PDT
by
virgil
(The evil that men do lives after them )
To: nickcarraway
I’ve got a “Dirty Harry” pinball machine in my game room. It has a gun for a ball shooter instead of a plunger. Everytime you make a big score, it plays one of his famous movie lines. I’ve been offered a bundle for that machine. But, some things are priceless. Maybe after ol’ Clint dies, I’ll sell it and buy my own island LOL!
To: nickcarraway
Sleazy? Where the heck do they get that from? Great memories of playing all day on the Captain Fantastic machine at Gee Gee's arcade on the beachfront in Manasquan NJ. Then a slice, then a dip in ocean, all the time checking out which girls were hanging around - what a time!
There is a pinball arcade / museum in Asbury Park that will take you back in time - play any machine for up to six hours for $20, you'd be surprised how fast that time goes by: Silverball Retro Arcade
38
posted on
09/08/2025 6:03:52 PM PDT
by
capydick
("Within the covers of the bible are the answers for all the problems men face")
To: NonValueAdded
I was stunned to hear that live in a small Hooywood club called the Palladium. The energy of The Who was incredible.
Much of my present day deafness no doubt.
To: Yardstick
Yeah, I turned a radio to an AM music station (there are still some of those) and a younger guy in his 20s heard it and thought it was great - he liked the way it sounded. It was a novel sound to him.
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