- abbreviation
- HH
- credit
- John Buras — Software
- credit
- Larry Day — Art
- credit
- Don Marshall — Art
- credit
- John Trudeau — Design
- gameplay_feature
- 3-Ball Multiball
- gameplay_feature
- Flippers ×4
- gameplay_feature
- Pop Bumpers
- gameplay_feature
- Slingshots ×3
- gameplay_feature
- 3-Bank Drop Targets ×2
- gameplay_feature
- Kick-Out Holes ×2
- gameplay_feature
- Ramps ×2
- gameplay_feature
- Captive Ball
- ipdb.corporate_entity_name
- VIFICO S.A.
- ipdb_id
- 6687
- ipdb.image_urls
- ["https://www.ipdb.org/images/6687/image-1.png"]
- ipdb.notable_features
- Flippers (4), Pop bumper (1), Slingshots (3), 3-bank drop targets (2), Kick-out hole (2), Ramps (2), Captive ball (1), 3-ball multiball. The pop bumper is physically isolated from the ball in play and can only be hit by the captive ball. "Remote trip" drop targets operate during multi-ball where dropping a target on one set of targets causes a target to drop on the other set. Photographic translite.
- ipdb.notes
- A copy of Premier's 1986 'Hollywood Heat' manufactured by VIFICO S.A. under license from Gottlieb/Premier. The VIFICO name should appear on the backglass below the score displays and on the playfield lower apron.
Gottlieb shipped the translites, unpopulated playfields, and the printed circuit boards to Spain. VIFICO made the cabinets, wiring, coils, assemblies, and the transformer.
VIFICO made licensed games from Gottlieb/Premier from 1985 to 1989. All used Gottlieb's System 80B.
- player_count
- 4
- system
- gottlieb-system-80b
- technology_generation
- solid-state
- theme
- Fictional