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  2. Bally Manufacturing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bally_Manufacturing

    The Bally Manufacturing Corporation was founded by Raymond Moloney on January 10, 1932, when Bally's original parent, Lion Manufacturing, established the company to make pinball games, taking its name from its first game, "Ballyhoo".

  3. List of pinball machines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pinball_machines

    This is an incomplete list of pinball games organized alphabetically by name. ... Bally: August 1965 [29] Action: Chicago Coin: September 15, 1969 [30] Action Baseball:

  4. WMS Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WMS_Industries

    In 1988, it acquired Bally/Midway, the amusement games division of Bally Manufacturing, which had decided to focus on its casino operating and manufacturing businesses. The video game operations were consolidated under the Midway name, while pinball machines continued to use the Williams and Bally names.

  5. Bally Pin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bally_pin

    Bally Pin is a pinball-based video game released in 1979 for Bally Astrocade. It was programmed by Bob Ogdon with sound by Scot L. Norris. Gameplay The game is played ...

  6. Eight Ball Deluxe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight_Ball_Deluxe

    The game is the successor to the popular Eight Ball pinball machine from 1977. In Eight Ball Deluxe, Bally added more rules, complicated shot combinations, and speech synthesis. The pinball machine is still very popular today [2] and was followed by the pinball machine Eight Ball Champ in 1985. [3]

  7. Elvira and the Party Monsters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elvira_and_the_Party_Monsters

    Elvira and the Party Monsters is a 1989 pinball game designed by Dennis Nordman and Jim Patla and released by Midway (under the Bally label), featuring horrorshow-hostess Elvira. It was followed 1996 by Scared Stiff, also designed by Nordman.

  8. Williams Pinball Controller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Williams_Pinball_Controller

    The Williams Pinball Controller (WPC) is an arcade system board platform used for several pinball games designed by Williams and Midway (under the Bally name) between 1990 and early 1999. It is the successor to their earlier System 11 hardware (High Speed, Pin*Bot, Black Knight 2000).

  9. Centaur (pinball) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centaur_(pinball)

    Centaur is a pinball machine designed by Jim Patla and produced by Bally. The game was inspired by the classic Bally's 1956 Balls-A-Poppin that was the first flipper pinball machine with multiball. [1] [2] Because of its success, the pinball machine was re-released in 1983 as Centaur II.

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