- gameplay_feature
- Spring Bumpers ×12
- ipdb.corporate_entity_name
- Bally Manufacturing Corporation
- ipdb_id
- 152
- ipdb.image_urls
- ["https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/Playfield.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/Backglass.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/image-1.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/image-2.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/image-3.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/image-4.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/image-5.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/image-6.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/image-7.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/image-8.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/image-9.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/152/image-10.jpg"]
- ipdb.manufacturer_trade_name
- Bally
- ipdb.model_number
- 213
- ipdb.notable_features
- Spring bumpers (12).
Patent No. 2,063,108 [VENDING MACHINE AND CONTROL MECHANISM THEREFOR] filed June 8, 1936. Granted December 8, 1936 to Frank K. Maitland, Inventor.
Patent No. 2,082,708 [CHECK OR COIN SELECTOR] filed September 26, 1936. Granted June 1, 1937 to Frank K. Maitland, Inventor.
- ipdb.notes
- This game has the same playfield as Bally's 1937 'Daily Dozen'.
In the August 1940 issue of Automatic Age, page 25, Bally president Ray Moloney stated that Bally Reserve was an operator-designed game but did not mention the operator's name. He also stated that production of this game would, within a week, increase to a 500-a-day schedule.
- month
- 5
- player_count
- 1
- technology_generation
- electromechanical
- year
- 1938