Back Space Glider

Sources

IPDB and Flipcommons Catalog contributed to this record.

Conflicts resolved (1 field)

theme
IPDB Outer Space IPDB Fantasy Flipcommons Catalog Outer Space used Flipcommons Catalog Fantasy used

Sources agree (6 fields)

credit
Steve Kordek — Design IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
technology_generation
electromechanical IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
month
7 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
year
1960 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
player_count
1 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
ipdb_id
6839 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog

Single source (11 fields)

reward_type
IPDB Free Play used
gameplay_feature
IPDB Trap Holes ×25 used
ipdb.manufacturer_trade_name
IPDB Williams used
ipdb.corporate_entity_name
IPDB Williams Electronic Manufacturing Corporation used
ipdb.image_urls
IPDB ["https://www.ipdb.org/images/6839/image-1.png","https://www.ipdb.org/images/6839/image-2.png"] used
ipdb.notes
IPDB Another example of a pop-up array is Chicago Coin's 1964 'Criss Cross Pop-Up'. This is the first game that Steve Kordek designed at Williams. His first pinball machine for Williams was Williams' 1961 'Bo Bo'. used
ipdb.notable_features
IPDB 15 shots per play. Trap holes (25). Possibilities for free play awards and extra shots. A mirror in the backbox allows the player to view the pop-up array of twenty-five trap holes located in rear of cabinet. Player attempts to make balls in array line up by shooting targets to cause balls that are out-of-line to be kicked upwards to resettle in a different hole. Pressing a release button on front of cabinet can release all balls at once. used
corporate_entity
Flipcommons Catalog williams-electronic-manufacturing-corporation used
title
Flipcommons Catalog space-glider used
name
Flipcommons Catalog Space Glider used
slug
Flipcommons Catalog space-glider used