Friday, July 13, 2012

Belgium Pinball Adventure!

Well, I returned to the United States on Wednesday after a ten-day trip to Belgium, where I pretty thoroughly scoped out the pinball situation.  I am happy to report that pinball is alive and well in Europe, though in some unexpected ways...

On my first day in Brussels, my gracious host Max de Radiguès led me to a café/bar called "Zebra" where he had played pinball before.  He said there was a fair amount of turnover at this location and when we walked in, there was a Tron machine.  It was filthy but it still played great.


I'm not going to lie, I got a pretty big kick out of seeing the pricing card and dot matrix text in French!



Max put in a 2 euro coin, which gave us 4 credits, and we played for a while.  Then I put in another 2 euros and we started to get warmed up.  I got a replay, and then later had my best ever game of Tron (68 million, I think?).  

We continued to walk around the city and came upon a Medieval Madness!  Sort of...


There was some sort of massive Renaissance Faire going on, with fully armored knights who were tilting in the middle of the city.  I only mention this because off to the side there were some old medieval games for kids to play, including something that looked an awful lot like an early ancestor of bagatelle, which of course turned into pinball:


The next day we were heading off to Bruges, so on a whim, I thought I'd search to see if I could find any pinball there.  Google lead me to FindAPinball.com, a site which I had never heard of.  I looked through its dropdown menu of cities and found places all over Europe, but not the USA.  I went to the about page and found that the creator of the site, Colin, was in fact, from Brussels!

I shot him an email to say that I was in town for a week and would he like to get together to play some pinball.  He emailed me the next morning, and it turned out that he knew my friend David Liben's wife, Eirene.  It's a small world after all, eh?  Alas, it didn't work to meet up because Colin was going out of town for a business trip, but he said I should look him up next time I'm in town (which I will, in January) because he had some friends with "private game rooms."  (!!?!)  

Anyway, Bruges was a bust, as was Amsterdam a few days later (only in terms of pinball! everything else about these cities was totally amazing).  But a day or two before I left, Max used FindAPinball.com to locate some more machines, which we drove to using his brother's car.


At a go-kart racing place on the edge of town we found an NBA machine which worked well and a Big Buck Hunter that was broken.  We played NBA for a while, which I got the hang of pretty quickly (another replay, but alas no "Haut Score").

This is all pretty straightforward.  You are probably reading this, thinking "Brussels sounds a lot like my city - there are a handful of machines scattered around at various locations."  That's true, but only for actual pinball, what the French-speaking world calls "Flipper."  Where things start to get weird is with a game that the French-speaking world calls "Slots."  These games are in every neighborhood bar that I saw in Brussels, and they look like this:


Every time we walked by a bar, my inner pinball alert went off - PINBALL!  But no, Max told me, these were just shaped like pinball machines, they were not pinball at all.  Check it out, they don't even have flippers!


Old school, right?  I didn't play, because I learned years ago that I don't do well with gambling.  But basically, you pick your numbers on the screen in the backbox and then launch your balls and try to nudge them into the appropriate holes.  This seemed so crazy to me! In America, we have spent years and years trying to distance ourselves from pinball's gambling past, but in Europe (or at least in Belgium) that past is thriving!  Max said that every bar had one of these machines and that there was usually an old drunk, plunking his last few Euros into these machines, in the hopes of winning enough money to buy himself another drink.  We even walked by while one was spitting out coins for a winner (the highest award possible is 20 euros).

I can't overstate how commonplace these machines were.  In 10 days I saw hundreds of them!  We even drove by a repair shop that only serviced these machines.  Crazy, right?!  Now if we could only replace them with "Flipper" machines...

Anyways, thanks for Max for taking me all over the city to find some pinball.  I can now proudly say that I have played pinball on another continent!  Thanks too to Colin for his great site.  If you are playing pinball in Europe, you should set up an account so you can add new locations and update others.  I'll add a link to our sidebar.  

On an unrelated side note, I have a new pinball comic up over on the Stern blog, about something funny that happened to Jon and me before I left on my trip!

2 comments:

  1. Someone mentioned to me (I think the guy who runs flippers.be) that the Belgian Bingos are all internet connected.

    There are a couple chinese manufacturers of bingoes for Latin American countries.

    Where I live (CA Bay Area) there are still a few old school Bally bingoes on location.

    ReplyDelete
  2. These "bingo" machines are the reason pinball was declared illegal so many years ago. In the US, those machines didn't pay out but you could win an insane amount of credits that would then be paid as cash by the location.

    ReplyDelete