Category:Electro-Mechanical Arcade GamesFrom Sega RetroPeriscope, an example of an early Sega electro-mechanical arcade game. The most common type of electro-mechanical games were early Pinball machines—all of them up to the late seventies were electromechanical (the industry switched to microprocessors around 1978 or so). Other electro-mechanicals include most early slot machines and Pachinko machines, although the earliest ones were completely mechanical. These games had one big problem: they broke down all the time. This is why you never see any electro-mechanicals anymore (aside from a few really old Skee Ball machines). The mean time between failures on most of these machines could be measured in days. Some were more reliable than others, but in general the more complex ones were constantly failing. Any individual game may have hundreds of moving parts, which were often subject to abuse. This makes functioning electro-mechanicals very rare today. SubcategoriesThis category has the following 13 subcategories, out of 13 total.
Pages in category "Electro-Mechanical Arcade Games"The following 48 pages are in this category, out of 48 total.
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