Back Bingo Novelty Manufacturing Company

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Flipcommons AI Descriptions (Manufacturer) and Flipcommons Catalog contributed to this record.

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description
Flipcommons AI Descriptions (Manufacturer) Bingo Novelty Manufacturing Company holds a footnote in pinball history as one of the very first manufacturers to produce pin games commercially. Operating from Chicago, the company produced eleven [[technology-generation:id:2]] games between 1931 and 1933 — the industry's absolute infancy, when the entire medium amounted to little more than a craze for inexpensive countertop bagatelle boards. The company's namesake game, [[title:id:721]] (1931), was among the earliest commercially manufactured pin games, appearing during the same explosive months that saw [[manufacturer:id:277]]'s legendary [[title:id:393]] ignite a nationwide mania. Subsequent titles like [[title:id:474]] (1932) and [[title:id:610]] (1933) continued in the same vein — simple, gravity-fed games designed for countertop placement in drugstores, cigar shops, and candy stores. These were not the sophisticated playfield designs that pinball would become; they were the raw material from which an industry was being improvised in real time. Bingo Novelty's production ended by 1933, before the adoption of electric scoring, solenoid-powered bumpers, or any of the other innovations that would transform pinball from a passing fad into a permanent fixture of American amusement. The company belongs entirely to pinball's origin story — a brief, chaotic moment when anyone in Chicago with access to a woodshop and a supply of steel balls could become a pin game manufacturer, and dozens did. used
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Flipcommons Catalog Bingo Novelty Manufacturing Company used
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Flipcommons Catalog bingo-novelty-manufacturing-company used