What are non-video arcade games?

Non-arcade games are exactly what they say they are, games that are not played on a video screen. This is not to say that these are limited to pinball machines only. As a general category, these will include all types of coin-operated games that are not played on a video screen. The non-video category will generally be divided into three main types, single player skill, multiplayer competitive machines, and pinball.

The single player skill category will include some of the more familiar carnival games such as skeeball, Rapid Fire Basketball and various shooting arcade games. This attraction of these challenges is based on the personal performance of the individual. The player’s ability to advance to more difficult levels or achieve a high score is not affected by a competitor, it is based on personal achievement. Your skill is measured by the same criteria each game, how high you get in the given amount of time or before you use up all your turns (for example, the fixed number of balls given during skeeball). Also included in this category are Pachinko machines, although your success here is largely based on luck.

The most common type of non-video arcade games are competitive multiplayer games. Arcade games that fall into this category will include (but are not limited to) foosball, air hockey, electronic darts, shuffleboard, and coin-operated pool tables. In addition to the ability for the individual player (or team) to score high, there’s also the more immediate satisfaction of being able to beat your friends in head-to-head competition.

Pinball machines naturally also fall under the category of non-video arcade games, but they also have the added distinction of being able to be both a single player skill game and a multiplayer competitive game.

Non-video games may not be as technologically advanced, but they are just as exciting and competitive.

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