Back Ticket Payout

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  1. By Flipcommons AI Descriptions (RewardType)

    Seed import (backfilled).

    description
    A reward mechanism in which the machine dispenses paper tickets based on the player's score or specific in-game achievements. The tickets are redeemable at the location for prizes — a model familiar from modern arcade redemption games. Ticket payout occupied a middle ground between [[reward-type:cash-payout]] and [[reward-type:novelty]]: the player received something tangible for skilled play, but the award was a ticket rather than legal tender, which gave operators and regulators a basis for distinguishing these machines from gambling devices. Ticket-dispensing pin games appeared as early as the mid-1930s, with manufacturers like [[manufacturer:esco]], [[manufacturer:bally]], and [[manufacturer:stoner-manufacturing-company]] offering ticket models alongside their cash payout and novelty configurations. Some machines were purpose-built for ticket dispensing, while others were available in multiple configurations — the same game could be ordered from the factory with a coin payout mechanism, a ticket dispenser, or neither, depending on the operator's market and local regulations. The ticket payout model never became the dominant reward mechanism for pinball, but it persisted as a niche configuration across multiple eras. It found its most enduring home not in traditional pinball but in the broader redemption game market, where ticket-dispensing skill games and chance games became the economic foundation of family entertainment centers and modern arcades.
  2. By Flipcommons Catalog

    Seed import (backfilled).

    display_order
    5
    name
    Ticket Payout
    slug
    ticket-payout