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  1. By Flipcommons AI Descriptions (Manufacturer)

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    description
    Pacific Amusement Manufacturing Company — known throughout the trade as PAMCO — was a Chicago pinball manufacturer active during the industry's explosive first decade. Despite its West Coast–sounding name, PAMCO operated entirely from Chicago's amusement manufacturing district, producing sixty-five games between 1932 and 1937 before disappearing from the market. PAMCO's significance extends well beyond its own catalog. The company employed [[person:harry-williams]], who designed several games for PAMCO — including [[title:contact-senior]] (1933) — before leaving to establish his own firm, [[manufacturer:williams]], which would become one of the most celebrated names in pinball history. Other designers including [[person:don-hooker]] and [[person:fred-mcclellan]] contributed to a catalog that spanned the rapid evolution from [[technology-generation:pure-mechanical]] countertop games to full-sized [[technology-generation:electromechanical]] machines with electric scoring and solenoid-powered features. PAMCO's run was brief — just five years — but it coincided with the most dynamic period of experimentation in pinball's early history. The company's machines document the transition from simple bagatelle-derived novelties to the more sophisticated playfield designs that would define the medium for the next half-century. That PAMCO served as a proving ground for Harry Williams alone would secure its place in the industry's story.
  2. By Flipcommons Catalog

    Seed import (backfilled).

    name
    PAMCO
    slug
    pamco