Back Northwest Coin Machine Company

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  1. By Flipcommons AI Descriptions (Manufacturer)

    Seed import (backfilled).

    description
    Northwest Coin Machine Company was a Chicago manufacturer active chiefly in 1931 and 1932, when pinball was still finding its commercial form. Its seven known titles are all [[technology-generation:pure-mechanical]] and include compact novelty pieces such as [[title:stop-and-sock-2]], [[title:fan-tan]], [[title:skippy]], and [[title:spoofus]], alongside the paired [[title:hi-lo-junior]] and [[title:hi-lo-senior]], which show the company working in both countertop and larger pin-table formats. The surviving record suggests a firm very much embedded in the rough-and-ready competitive culture of early Depression-era pinball. Northwest's games borrowed freely from popular ideas of the day, and the company's [[title:goofus-2]] was reportedly retitled [[title:spoofus]] after legal pressure connected to [[manufacturer:bally]]. Its history therefore illustrates an essential fact about the 1932 market: small Chicago makers were moving quickly, imitating one another freely, and improvising around legal as well as commercial pressures as the new industry took shape.
  2. By Flipcommons Catalog

    Seed import (backfilled).

    name
    Northwest Coin Machine Company
    slug
    northwest-coin-machine-company