- gameplay_feature
- Ball Kickers ×4
- gameplay_feature
- Free Play Holes ×3
- gameplay_feature
- Trap Holes ×18
- ipdb.corporate_entity_name
- Daval Manufacturing Co.
- ipdb_id
- 1536
- ipdb.image_urls
- ["https://www.ipdb.org/images/1536/image-1.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/1536/image-2.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/1536/image-3.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/1536/image-9.png","https://www.ipdb.org/images/1536/image-10.png","https://www.ipdb.org/images/1536/image-11.png","https://www.ipdb.org/images/1536/image-12.png","https://www.ipdb.org/images/1536/image-13.png","https://www.ipdb.org/images/1536/image-14.png","https://www.ipdb.org/images/1536/image-15.png","https://www.ipdb.org/images/1536/image-16.png"]
- ipdb.notable_features
- 10 balls for 5 cents. Trap holes (18), Ball kickers (4), Free Play holes (3). Balls landing in Moonshine hole light the backboard.
- ipdb.notes
- Marketplace Pictorial History, page 131, April 1982 attributes Al S. Douglis and Dave Helfenbein to this game and states it did not do well when competing with the automatic payout games that the competition was making, saying the men believed people wanted to play pinball just for the fun of it. However, this game "never even got off the ground."
- month
- 9
- player_count
- 1
- reward_type
- Free Play
- technology_generation
- electromechanical
- year
- 1935