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Manufacturer | Midway |
---|---|
Release date | February 1991 |
System | Williams WPC (Alphanumeric) |
Design | Barry Oursler, Mark Sprenger |
Artwork | Mark Sprenger |
Mechanics | Gerald Hedberg |
Music | Dan Forden |
Sound | Dan Forden |
Production run | 2,187 units (approximate) |
Harley-Davidson was a pinball machine arcade game manufactured by Midway and released under the Bally label in February 1991. Barry Oursler and Mark Sprenger designed the pinball game [1] utilizing the Williams Pinball Controller (Williams WPC) arcade system board platform. This was the first pinball game sold under the Bally label to use the Williams WPC system and their last to use an Alphanumeric Display. [2] [3]
Harley-Davidson (Bally pinball) features various gameplay elements that allow players to accumulate points and bonuses. Completing the U-S-A lanes, representing the colors of the American flag (red, white, and blue), with a single-direction lane change, advances the bonus multiplier, which can reach a maximum of 6x and remains unchanged on factory difficulty. Clearing the lanes at 6x triggers the 'lights out lane extra ball' feature. Subsequently, each completion of 'USA' grants players a 'USA bonus,' starting at 100,000 points and increasing by 100,000 points with each collection, without any upper limit.
The game includes two sets of drop targets: one on the far left spelling 'H-A-R' and one in the center spelling 'L-E-Y.' Completing 'HAR' lights up the left spinner, while completing 'LEY' lights up the right spinner, and both award 3,000 points per spin. When players complete both sets, they advance through the HARLEY bonus levels (50,000, 100,000, 200,000, 300,000, and 500,000 points).
The 'DAVIDSON' stand-ups are located around the playfield. Completing 'DAVIDSON' lights up the speed bonus at the right eject, a 'hurry-up' feature that starts at 1 million points and increases by 1 million points with each collection. If players complete 'DAVIDSON' twice during one ball, the extra ball at the right eject becomes available. Additionally, the jackpot can be lit during play while players travel across America.
Hitting the left eject awards 25,000 points at the start of the game. Successive hits on this eject increase its value (10,000, 25,000, 50,000, 100,000, and 150,000, with an additional ball lock). Locking a ball activates the right eject for multi-ball initiation. During multi-ball, completing Harley and 'DAVIDSON' awards 5 million points and lights the orbit shots, which score 1 million points each for the remainder of multi-ball. It's important to note that the jackpot is not directly related to multi-ball. After the first multi-ball, the eject hole value resets to 10,000, with no lights.
There's a limit of five extra balls per game, and a mystery score is awarded for each one earned thereafter.
Sega Pinball produced an unrelated Harley-Davidson pinball machine in 1999. It was designed by Jon Borg and Lonnie D. Ropp. The game went through three different production runs. The first was made by Sega and continued by Stern Pinball in 1999 after they bought Sega's pinball division in the same year; the second was produced by Stern Pinball in 2002; and the third, with an artwork change also by Stern was released in 2004. The third version can be played on The Pinball Arcade .
Pinball games are a family of games in which a ball is propelled into a specially designed table where it bounces off various obstacles, scoring points either en route or when it comes to rest. Historically the board was studded with nails called 'pins' and had hollows or pockets which scored points if the ball came to rest in them. Today, pinball is most commonly an arcade game in which the ball is fired into a specially designed cabinet known as a pinball machine, hitting various lights, bumpers, ramps, and other targets depending on its design.
WMS Industries, Inc. was an American electronic gaming and amusement manufacturer in Enterprise, Nevada. It was merged into Scientific Games in 2016. WMS's predecessor was the Williams Manufacturing Company, founded in 1943 by Harry E. Williams. However, the company that became WMS Industries was formally founded in 1974 as Williams Electronics, Inc.
A glossary of terms, commonly used in discussing pinball machines.
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Demolition Man is a Williams pinball machine released in February 1994. It is based on the motion picture of the same name. It is part of WMS' SuperPin line of widebody games.
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Jack-Bot is a 1995 pinball game which was designed by Barry Oursler and Larry DeMar, and released by US-based electronic gaming company Williams. It is the third game in the Pin-Bot series, following Pin-Bot (1986) and The Machine: Bride of Pin-Bot (1991).
The Williams Pinball Controller (WPC) is an arcade system board platform used for several pinball games designed by Williams and Midway between 1990 and early 1999. It is the successor to their earlier System 11 hardware. It was succeeded by Williams/Midway's Pinball 2000 platform, before Williams left the pinball business in October 1999.
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Harley-Davidson is a Sega Pinball pinball machine released in September 1999 and was the last machine released by this company. It was designed by Jon Borg and Lonnie D. Ropp.
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