I can only find 2 games from Electromatic, and neither one is Senior, when was this game made. If it makes any difference, the 2 I can find (Sinbad and Totem) are worth around $300-$325 each.)
According to the Mr Pinball, Pinball List and Price Guide 2008, I don't see a 1980 Evel Knievel pinball machine, as far as I can tell they were made in 1977. If that's the machine you are talking about it's worth about $975, depending on the condition, both how well it works and how well it works.
It is conceivable a Pinball Machine ( not strictly speaking a Slot Machine) Pinball machines are NOT normally gambling devices- but were banned in NYC up till about l978 ( baseball machines were okay, as were some other arcade machines at Coney Island and 42nd st arcades, but pinball machines were illegal for many years)- The Bally company made both Pinball and Slot Machines - and many had themes to various movies, TV shows- there was even a (Captain Fantastic) machine honoring Elton John, a Top Gun, etc. My guess they may have made a Twilight Zone pinball machine-as slot machines are ( not for kids) this type of marketing would not have been used. I have never heard of a Twilight Zone pinball or slot machine.
light is made up of photons which is electromatic energy
Considering this is in the invention section, I'm assuming you are asking when pinball was first made. The first coin-operated "pinball machine" was invented in 1931 by Automatic Industries and was called "Whiffle Board". But the gaming industry really began in the mid 1930's with the production of a game called "Ballyhoo". It was invented by one Raymond Maloney, who later started the Bally Manufacturing Company of Chicago, IL.
I just picked-up a super flip gumball/pinball machine at the Pleasanton Swap Meet for $30.00. Its in very good condition missing the play field plastic and a couple of bumper rubbers. I very happy with what I paid.
This questions is unanswerable because Multiple actual and virtual Kiss-themed pinball games have been made over the past few decades, beginning with the Bally-made machine first conceived in January 1978.So to answer the question we need to know:-which actual Kiss Pinball machine is it? (rare and older ones are worth more)-what is its condition? (better condition drives up the price)-Who has owned it in the past (famous owners drive up the price)A quick search on eBay shows that you can buy machines today for anywhere between $2,000 and $9,000
Originally, pinball machines didn't have flippers (the things at the bottom of the machine that hit the ball). Instead, you would launch a ball into a playfield full of pins and hope for it to land in a hole (like plinko). These pins made the game called "Pinball".The earliest pinball machines were a wooden playfeild with multiple holes and pins in the board. A ball was dropped at one end and it would bounce on the pins and hopefully fall in the higher scoring holes. This was before electronics, bumpers and flippers.
It depends on the source from which you are downloading the pinball game. It is legal to download a pinball game from official app stores or authorized websites where the game is offered for free or for purchase. However, downloading pirated versions of pinball games or obtaining them from unauthorized sources would be illegal and could potentially result in copyright infringement.
Lybian terrorists stole plutonium and asked Doc to make them a bomb. He gave them a fake bomb made up of pinball machine parts and used the plutonium for his new invention.
That's hard to say, one was made in 1976 and that's worth $700 in good cosmetic and working order. There's one made in 197? from a company I don't know, it's J. Steuben, and it's worth about $300.
Yeah, there is one, made by Bally in 1992, what do you want to know about it?
People of the early 80's moved away from the pinball tables and moved to the flasher new arcade machines instead. The pinball manufactures tried to combat this by making video pinball hybrids like 'Ms Pac Man' where the pinball table was inside an arcade cabinet along side the traditional Pac Man game. But when home entertainment in the mid 80's came along people moved away from the arcades so the pinball manufactures had no choice but to move away from the hybrids and make the traditional pinball table for the pinball loyalest. During the 90's the pinball popularly kept on dropping and manufacturers started going bankrupt including, in 1996, the formally big company Gottlieb that has been selling pinball since 1927. Two other big company's merged becoming Bally/Williams to keep alive during this period. In 1999 Bally/Williams created a table so revolutionary they calmed it would save pinball, it was named 'Pinball 2000' and it included a holographic display on the playfield. However only two tables got made, and where profitable, before Bally/Williams ceased production of pinball too concentrate on the more profitable slot machines. The last pinball company, Sega Pinball, went bankrupt after Sega's failed Dreamcast in late 1999. Determined not to let pinball die Gary Stern brought out Sega Pinball and named it Stern Pinball and now remains the only pinball manufacturer and with no completion they are returning a profit.