(Topic ID: 6276)

$500 Giftcard Pinside Contest Begins Now!!(ENDED)!!

By pinmike

12 years ago


Topic Heartbeat

Topic Stats

  • 7,813 posts
  • 181 Pinsiders participating
  • Latest reply 7 years ago by MrBally
  • Topic is favorited by 2 Pinsiders

You

Linked Games

No games have been linked to this topic.

    Topic Gallery

    View topic image gallery

    image_(resized).jpeg
    images-2.jpeg
    images-1.jpeg
    surfing.jpg
    pinmikerocks.jpg
    IMAG0145.jpg
    IMAG0137.jpg
    IMAG0134.jpg
    retard.jpg
    this-is-one-of-the-reasons-i-wear-diap.gif
    795.jpg
    23415.jpg
    MyMilkInsideYou[1].jpg
    demotivational-posters-maybe[1].jpg
    2133.jpg
    balls.gif

    You're currently viewing posts by Pinsider rascal_h.
    Click here to go back to viewing the entire thread.

    This topic is closed.

    732 posts in this topic match your search for posts by rascal_h. You are on page 1 of 3.
    #822 12 years ago

    Hah... I go out for a couple hours and miss 17 pages.

    #834 12 years ago

    Black_Rose videos

    #861 12 years ago

    B_R Dirty Harry video

    #874 12 years ago

    Pinball is a type of arcade game, usually coin-operated, where a player attempts to score points by manipulating one or more metal balls on a playfield inside a glass-covered case called a pinball machine. The primary objective of the game is to score as many points as possible. Secondary objectives are to maximize the time spent playing (by earning extra balls and keeping the ball in play as long as possible) and to earn free games (known as replays).

    #878 12 years ago

    The origins of pinball are intertwined with the history of many other games. Games played outdoors by rolling balls or stones on a grass course, such as bocce or bowls, eventually evolved into games played by hitting the balls with sticks and propelling them at targets. Croquet, golf and shuffleboard are examples of these games.

    These games led to indoor versions that could be played on a table, such as billiards, or on the floor of a pub, like bowling. The tabletop versions of these games became the ancestor of the modern pinball machine.

    #882 12 years ago

    The existence of table-based games dates back to the 15th century. While some games took the wickets and balls of Croquet and turned them into the pockets of modern billiards, some tables became smaller and had the holes placed in strategic areas in the middle of the table.

    In France, during the reign of King Louis XIV, someone took a billiard table and narrowed it, placing pins at one end of the table while making the player shoot balls with a stick or cue from the other end. Pins took too long to reset when knocked down, so the pins eventually were fixed to the table and holes took the place of targets. Players could ricochet the ball off the pins to achieve the harder scorable holes.

    In 1777, a party was thrown in honor of the King and his wife at the Château de Bagatelle, owned by the brother of the king. The highlight of the party was a new table game featuring the slender table and cue sticks, which players used to shoot ivory balls up an inclined playfield. The table game was dubbed Bagatelle by the King's brother and shortly after swept through France.[1]

    Some French soldiers carried their favorite bagatelle tables with them to America while helping to fight the British in the American Revolutionary War. Bagatelle spread and became so popular in America as well that a political cartoon from 1863 even depicts President Abraham Lincoln playing a tabletop bagatelle game.[2]

    The birth of pinball

    In 1869, a British inventor named Montague Redgrave settled in America and manufactured bagatelle tables out of his factory in Cincinnati, Ohio. In 1871 Redgrave was granted US Patent #115,357 for his "Improvements in Bagatelle",[3] which replaced the cue at the player's end of the table with a coiled spring and a plunger. The player shot balls up the inclined playfield using this plunger, a device that remains in pinball to this day. This innovation made the game friendlier to players. The game also shrank in size and began to fit on top of a bar or counter. The balls became marbles and the wickets became small "pins". Redgrave's innovations in game design are acknowledged as the birth of pinball in its modern form.

    #886 12 years ago

    By the 1930s, manufacturers were producing coin-operated versions of bagatelles, now known as "marble games" or "pin games". The table was under glass and used Redgrave's plunger device to propel the ball into the upper playfield. In 1931 David Gottlieb's Baffle Ball became the first overnight hit of the coin-operated era. Selling for $17.50, the game dispensed five to seven balls for a penny. The game struck a chord with a public eager for cheap entertainment in a depression-era economy. Most drugstores and taverns in America operated pinball machines, with many locations making back the cost of the game in a matter of days. Baffle Ball sold over 50,000 units and established Gottlieb as the first major manufacturer of pinball machines.

    In 1932, Gottlieb distributor Ray Moloney found it hard to obtain more Baffle Ball units to sell. In his frustration he founded Lion Manufacturing to produce a game of his own design, Ballyhoo, named after a popular magazine of the day. The game became a smash hit as well; its larger playfield and ten pockets making it more of a challenge than Baffle Ball, selling 50,000 units in 7 months.[4] Moloney eventually changed the name of his company to Bally to reflect the success of this game. These early machines were relatively small, mechanically simple and originally designed to sit on a counter or bar top.

    The 1930s saw a leap forward in innovation in pinball design and devices with the introduction of electrification. A company called Pacific Amusements in Los Angeles, California, USA produced a game called Contact in 1933. Contact had an electrically powered solenoid to propel the ball out of a bonus hole in the middle of the playfield. Another solenoid rang a bell to reward the player.[5] The designer of Contact, Harry Williams, would eventually form his own company, Williams Manufacturing, in 1944. Other manufacturers quickly followed suit with similar features. In addition, electric lights soon became a standard feature of all subsequent pinball games, designed to attract people to the game.

    By the end of 1932 there were approximately 150 companies manufacturing pinball machines, most of them in the city of Chicago. Chicago has been the center of pinball manufacturing ever since. Competition among the companies was brutal, however, and by 1934 there were only 14 companies left.

    Post-war boom

    During World War II all of the major manufacturing companies in coin-operated games were put into use manufacturing equipment for the American war effort. Some companies like Williams bought old games from operators and refurbished them, adding new artwork with a patriotic theme. By the end of the war, a generation of Americans looked for amusement in their bars and malt shops. Pinball saw another golden age of growth. Innovations such as the tilt mechanism and free games (known as replays) appeared.

    The post-war era was dominated by Gottlieb. Game designer Wayne Neyens along with artist Leroy Parker turned out game after game that collectors consider some of the most classic pinball machines ever designed. Gottlieb's Humpty Dumpty, introduced in 1947, was the first game to add player-controlled flippers to keep the ball in play longer and added a skill factor to the game.[6] The low power of the Humpty Dumpty flippers necessitated that three pairs be placed around the playfield in order to get the ball to the top. But the addition of a DC power supply enabled the flippers on Humpty Dumpty to become only two, more powerful ones at the bottom of the Triple Action playfield—one of many innovations by designer Steve Kordek, who is also credited with introducing the very first "drop target" (1962 on Vagabond) and "multiball" (1963 on Beat the Clock) concepts to the game.

    Solid-state era

    The advent of the microprocessor brought another new age for pinball as it entered the realm of electronic gaming. The electromechanical relays and scoring reels that drove games in the 1950s and 1960s were replaced in the 1970s with circuit boards and digital displays. Williams introduced their first solid-state electronic game, Hot Tip, in 1977,[7] and because of this new technology, they and Bally thrived in this era as they both sold large numbers of games with fancy sound effects, speech, and game features that only a computer could make possible.

    The video game boom of the 1980s, however, signaled the end of the boom for pinball. Arcades quickly replaced rows of pinball machines with games like 1978's Space Invaders, 1979's Asteroids, 1980's Pac-Man, and 1981's Galaga. The video games earned significantly greater profits than the pinball machines of the day. Bally, Williams, and Gottlieb continued to quietly make pinball machines while they also manufactured video games in much higher numbers. Many of the larger companies were acquired by, or merged with, other companies. Chicago Coin was purchased by the Stern family who brought the company into the digital era as Stern Enterprises, which closed its doors in the mid-1980s. Bally exited the pinball business in 1988 and sold their assets to Williams, who subsequently used the Bally trademark from then on for about half of their pinball releases.

    While the video game craze of the late '70s and early '80s dealt a severe blow to pinball revenue, it did spark the creative talents within the industry. All companies involved tried to take advantage of the new solid state technology to improve player appeal of pinball and win back former players from the video games. Some of this creativity resulted in landmark designs and features still present today. Some of these include Speech like on Williams' "Gorgar", ramps for the ball to travel around such as Williams "Space Shuttle", "multiball" used on William's "Firepower", multi-level games like Gottlieb's "Black Hole" and Williams' "Black Knight", and blinking chase lights as used on Bally's "Xenon". Although these novel features did not entirely win back players as the manufacturers had hoped, they did change the way pinball would be perceived by players for decades to come.

    #891 12 years ago

    After the collapse of the coin-operated video game industry, pinball saw another comeback in the 1990s. Some new manufacturers entered the field such as Capcom Pinball and Alvin G. and Company, founded by Alvin Gottlieb, son of David Gottlieb. Gary Stern, the son of Williams co-founder Sam Stern, founded Data East Pinball with funding from Data East Japan.

    The games from Williams now dominated the industry, with complicated mechanical devices and more elaborate display and sound systems attracting new players to the game. Licensing popular movies and icons of the day became a staple for pinball, with Bally/Williams' The Addams Family hitting an all-time modern sales record of 20,270 machines. Two years later, Williams commemorated this benchmark with a limited edition of 1,000 Addams Family Gold pinball machines, featuring gold-colored trim and updated software with new game features. Other notable popular licenses included Indiana Jones: The Pinball Adventure and Star Trek: The Next Generation. Expanding markets in Europe and Asia helped fuel the revival of interest. Pat Lawlor was a designer, working for Williams up until their exit from the industry in 1999. About a year later, Lawlor announced a return to the industry, starting his own company.[8] working in conjunction with Stern Pinball to produce new games into the new millennium.

    The end of the 1990s saw another downturn in the industry, with Gottlieb, Capcom, and Alvin G. all closing their doors by the end of 1996. Data East's pinball division was acquired by Sega and became Sega Pinball in 1996. By 1997 there were only two companies left: Sega Pinball and Williams. In 1999 Sega sold their pinball division to Gary Stern (President of Sega Pinball at the time) who called his company Stern Pinball.[9] By this time, Williams games rarely sold more than 4,000 units. In 1999 Williams attempted to revive sales with the Pinball 2000 line of games, merging a video display into the pinball playfield. The reception was initially good with Revenge From Mars selling well over six thousand machines, but well short of the ten thousand and up production runs for releases just a half dozen years earlier. The next Pinball 2000 game, Star Wars Episode I, managed to sell only a little over 3,500 machines. Williams exited the financially weak pinball business to focus on making gaming equipment for casinos, which was significantly more profitable. They licensed the rights to reproduce Bally/Williams parts to Illinois Pinball and the rights to reproduce full sized machines to The Pinball Factory. Stern Pinball is the only remaining manufacturer of original pinball machines. Almost all members of the design teams for Stern Pinball are former employees of Williams.

    In November 2005 The Pinball Factory (TPF), based in Melbourne, Australia, announced that they would be producing a new Crocodile Hunter-themed pinball machine under the Bally label. However, with the death of Steve Irwin, it was announced that the future of this game has become uncertain.[10] In 2006 TPF announced that they would be reproducing two popular 90's era Williams machines, Medieval Madness and Cactus Canyon.[11] TPF however was unable to make good on its promises to produce new machines, and in October, 2010 transferred its Williams Electronics Games licenses as well as its pinball spare parts manufacturing and distribution business to Planetary Pinball Supply Inc, a California distributor of pinball replacement parts.[1]

    In 2006, Illinois pinball company PinBall Manufacturing Inc. produced 178 reproductions of Capcom's Big Bang Bar for the European market and U.S. markets.[12][13]

    In 2011, Jersey Jack Pinball of Lakewood, NJ announced plans to produce a pinball machine called Wizard of Oz.[2]

    Pinball and gambling

    Pinball machines, like many other mechanical games, were sometimes used as gambling devices.[14] Some pinball machines, such as Bally's "bingos", featured a grid on the backglass scoring area with spaces corresponding to targets or holes on the playfield. Free games could be won if the player was able to get the balls to land in a winning pattern; however, doing this was nearly random, and a common use for such machines was for gambling. Other machines allowed a player to win and accumulate large numbers of "free games" which could then be cashed out for money with the location owner. Later, this type of feature was discontinued in an effort to legitimize the machines, and to avoid legal problems in areas where awarding free games was considered illegal, some games, called Add-A-Ball, did away with the free game feature, instead giving players extra balls to play (between 5 and 25 in most cases). These extra balls were indicated via lighted graphics in the backglass or by a ball count wheel, but in some areas even that was disallowed and so some games came with a sticker to cover over the counters.

    Pinball was banned beginning in the early 1940s until 1976 in New York City.[15] New York mayor Fiorello La Guardia was responsible for the ban, believing that it robbed school children of their hard earned nickels and dimes.[15][16] La Guardia spearheaded major raids throughout the city, collecting thousands of machines. The mayor himself participated alongside the police in destroying the machines with sledgehammers before dumping the remnants into the city's rivers.[16]

    The ban ended when Roger Sharpe (a star witness for the AMOA - Amusement and Music Operators Association) testified in April 1976 before a committee in a Manhattan courtroom that pinball games had become games of skill and were no longer games of chance (i.e. gambling). He began to play one of two games set up in the courtroom, and — in a move he compares to Babe Ruth's home run in the 1932 World Series — called out precisely what he was going to shoot for, and then proceeded to do exactly so. Astonished committee members reportedly then voted to remove the ban, a result which was then followed in many other cities. (Sharpe reportedly acknowledges his courtroom shot was by sheer luck.)[17]

    Like New York, Los Angeles banned pinball machines in 1939. The ban was overturned by the Supreme Court of California in 1974 because (1) if pinball machines were games of chance, the ordinance was preempted by state law governing games of chance in general, and (2) if they were games of skill, the ordinance was unconstitutional as a denial of the equal protection of the laws.[18] Regardless of these events, some towns in America still have such bans on the law books over fifty years later, and several countries still ban the games and their rewards. More recent games are clearly labeled "FOR AMUSEMENT ONLY" in an attempt to emphasize their legitimate, legal nature.

    Pachinko

    Another close but distinct relative of pinball is pachinko, a gambling game played in Japan. Although they share a common ancestry, the games are very different, in that pachinko simply involves shooting many small balls one after the other into a nearly-vertical playfield, while pinball is about the manipulation of the small number of balls currently in play.

    #918 12 years ago

    What's brown and sticky?

    A stick

    #923 12 years ago

    Mcdonalds or BK?

    #927 12 years ago

    Star Trek or Star Wars?

    #932 12 years ago

    Cousin Oliver.., cute, or ruined the show?

    #937 12 years ago

    Autobots or Decepticons?

    #941 12 years ago

    Terrable... Wow, or wow?

    #948 12 years ago

    Boxers and South Park

    #953 12 years ago

    Han Solo or Indiana Jones?

    #959 12 years ago

    Chocolate or Vanilla?

    #970 12 years ago
    Quoted from terrable:

    wowwwwwwwwwwww

    I no, rite?

    #976 12 years ago

    Beatles or Stones?

    #1004 12 years ago

    You can learn a lot about people in a thread like this... As stupid as it is. It's just for fun.

    #1008 12 years ago

    Dark Side of the Moon or The Wall?

    #1038 12 years ago
    Quoted from davewtf:

    it's all your fault

    Yeah, it's all Mikes fault!

    Seriously though... This is a really awesome thing you are doing Mike.

    #1044 12 years ago

    Say something nice about the person who posted before you.

    #1056 12 years ago

    Chevy or Ford?

    #1062 12 years ago

    Enough nonsense from me... Gonna troll real threads then sleep. Goodnight everybody.

    #1067 12 years ago
    Quoted from lefttee:

    I guess this is a good place to make my first post.

    Welcome

    #1119 12 years ago

    Can't sleep

    #1124 12 years ago
    Quoted from BLACK_ROSE:

    My baby Sophia Moon ... Gonna put the $ 500.00 in her saving's acct-

    A pinballlife certificate in her savings?

    She's adorable B_R

    #1132 12 years ago

    I got stuff from Cointaker and Marco. Getting packages often is fun

    #1145 12 years ago
    Quoted from doublezo1:

    Just finished pullin the mylar.

    Nice job. Looks good

    #1163 12 years ago

    B_R is gone.. Now I win!

    #1169 12 years ago

    See ya jarjar

    #1174 12 years ago
    Quoted from BLACK_ROSE:

    This will probably go on for another hour anyway . I better havng with it..

    Yeah, I really have to sleep. Who knows what mike picked. Could be week, month, year.

    #1206 12 years ago

    Looks like it was a beauty. DM seems to be trending around here lately.

    #1215 12 years ago
    Quoted from absocountry2:

    I was thinking around $400-500 on the T2 that does not work

    I would. It's been a fun machine to work on. Unless your talking about playfield repair or something.

    #1229 12 years ago
    Quoted from doublestack:

    I just got a Demolition Man myself tonight!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Whoa yea! I LOVE this PIN.
    Traded my FT for it and could not be happier. I'll post a thread on it soon!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Holy moly... That's like 5 pinsiders this week who have picked it up.

    #1607 12 years ago

    Good morning

    #1646 12 years ago

    Dunkin donuts

    #1661 12 years ago

    Pinmike 4 life

    #1667 12 years ago

    Leaf switches

    #1791 12 years ago

    Think the server is dying.

    #1809 12 years ago

    Purple people eater

    #1839 12 years ago

    Sorry robin

    #1843 12 years ago

    What's everyone eating for lunch?

    #1880 12 years ago

    Dangelos #9

    #1903 12 years ago

    We are here

    #1919 12 years ago

    B_R is a pirate

    #1924 12 years ago

    I'd rather be playing pinball

    #1930 12 years ago

    Pinballlife.com

    #1936 12 years ago

    Marcospecialties.com

    #1948 12 years ago

    Ordering lunch

    #1961 12 years ago

    Pastrami Ruben and small clam chowder

    #1967 12 years ago

    Hope this thread doesn't cost you $$$ robin

    #2043 12 years ago

    Back to work

    #2069 12 years ago

    Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo

    #2075 12 years ago
    Quoted from BLACK_ROSE:

    Anyone know this Pinhead ?

    There goes my appetite.

    #2083 12 years ago

    I'm guessing this is the largest thread ever on Pinside

    #2087 12 years ago

    gif

    breakmystride371-1.gifbreakmystride371-1.gif

    #2092 12 years ago

    cupcake

    Dog_cupcake_tease.gifDog_cupcake_tease.gif

    #2095 12 years ago

    seinfeld

    2nkntkl.gif2nkntkl.gif

    #2097 12 years ago

    Birthday

    117994a93de2ff49af3dec867387d.gif117994a93de2ff49af3dec867387d.gif

    #2102 12 years ago
    Quoted from BLACK_ROSE:

    what's wrong with that dog ?

    It really wants a cupckae?

    #2103 12 years ago

    pope

    beta283.gifbeta283.gif

    #2107 12 years ago

    big

    1b12eccf0d813a22b1e7a794a5b8d9cd.gif1b12eccf0d813a22b1e7a794a5b8d9cd.gif

    #2114 12 years ago

    wrastlin

    qzf9c9.gifqzf9c9.gif

    #2118 12 years ago

    cat

    dancing-cat.gifdancing-cat.gif

    #2119 12 years ago

    Juggling

    Bowling_balls_Juggle.gifBowling_balls_Juggle.gif

    #2121 12 years ago

    gymnast

    Balance_beam_miss.gifBalance_beam_miss.gif

    #2127 12 years ago

    dive

    Toilet_Dive.gifToilet_Dive.gif

    #2128 12 years ago
    Quoted from The_Dude_Abides:

    I can't believe this is still going!! Rascal still posting strong...

    Just for my lunch break

    #2130 12 years ago

    bush

    funny_new_59.giffunny_new_59.gif

    #2137 12 years ago

    How do you put Live animation on Here ?

    I download the animated gifs i find to my desktop then upload to the server.

    funny_new_17.giffunny_new_17.gif

    #2140 12 years ago

    Is that the new SM topper Rascal?

    Hah, yeah.

    580damme20dance.jpg580damme20dance.jpg

    #2145 12 years ago

    Hair dryer prank

    Hair_dryer_prank.gifHair_dryer_prank.gif

    #2148 12 years ago

    Roof

    roofsurf.gifroofsurf.gif

    #2154 12 years ago

    Back to work... Im gonna lose.

    t8nk3a.gift8nk3a.gif

    #2174 12 years ago

    Lame work post

    #2199 12 years ago

    Gomez or Ritchie?

    #2201 12 years ago

    Cant post!

    There we go... posts werent showing up. Sorry for the triple.

    #2207 12 years ago

    Tim and Eric Awesome Show Great Job

    #2225 12 years ago

    This is a post

    #2232 12 years ago
    Quoted from robin:

    I discussed this with Mike. The way it works is that PinMike will make a post here when his alarm goes. The post above that post is the winner. We figured it would be hones if he opens his browser 15 minutes before the alarm and creates a new post "Rrrringgg!" - He will then have his mouse on the "send post" button until the alarm goes, then click the button.
    That should make things pretty honest as he won't know who wins until clicking.

    Nice

    #2236 12 years ago

    I want some pinballlife.com cash!

    #2247 12 years ago

    Gary Stern is a prize fighter

    #2253 12 years ago

    Wanna use some HTML? Allowed markup: a blockquote code em strong ul ol li sub You can also put code in between backtick ( ` ) characters. Links are automatically generated when you insert an URL in your post. All links get a 'nofollow' so spamming is pointless.

    #2254 12 years ago

    Gotta have more cowbell

    #2271 12 years ago

    Nice here in MA

    #2553 12 years ago

    Rrriiiiiiiinnnnggg!

    #2619 12 years ago

    Lords of pages

    #2628 12 years ago

    That's a great ass

    #2760 12 years ago

    Should I buy Comet for $750?

    #2770 12 years ago

    Epic thread is epic

    #2786 12 years ago

    I want to be playin T2

    #2798 12 years ago

    The_Dude_Abides

    #2834 12 years ago

    pin-tastastic

    #2862 12 years ago

    The_Gorilla

    #2868 12 years ago

    absocountry2

    #2874 12 years ago

    Thunderpants

    #2968 12 years ago

    Coffee break

    #2979 12 years ago

    Timer is ticking

    #2984 12 years ago

    Bathroom break

    #2995 12 years ago

    Could be a month from now... Who knows

    #3015 12 years ago

    Back to work

    #3034 12 years ago

    Chewing gum

    #3049 12 years ago

    I'm getting lots of karma for dumb posts

    #3062 12 years ago

    Kfjlhjehgjjhjkjegkfrgjhkhcfffrehk

    #3142 12 years ago

    I love my dog

    #3155 12 years ago

    Happy dance

    #3167 12 years ago

    Austin 3:16

    #3174 12 years ago

    Cactus Jack

    #3180 12 years ago

    Red Rooster

    #3185 12 years ago

    George the animal steel

    #3191 12 years ago

    Doink the clown

    #3199 12 years ago

    Razor Ramon

    #3207 12 years ago

    The undertaker

    #3213 12 years ago

    The iron sheik

    #3222 12 years ago

    Papa shango

    #3235 12 years ago

    Sid justice

    #3242 12 years ago

    Marty jannetty

    #3252 12 years ago

    Hawk & Animal

    #3269 12 years ago

    Barry Horowitz

    #3296 12 years ago

    Macho man Randy savage

    #3301 12 years ago

    Ultimate warrior

    #3315 12 years ago

    Lanny poffo

    #3337 12 years ago

    Shawn Michaels

    #3418 12 years ago

    Dusty Rhodes

    #3439 12 years ago

    Scotty 2 Hotty

    #3445 12 years ago

    Jumpin Jim Brunzel

    #3459 12 years ago

    Brutus the barber beefcake

    #3468 12 years ago

    Duke the dumpster drose

    #3487 12 years ago

    Paul Orndorf

    #3495 12 years ago

    Classy Freddie blassie

    #3499 12 years ago

    Rowdy roddy piper

    #3505 12 years ago

    Masterpiece chris masters

    #3512 12 years ago

    Spike Dudley

    #3535 12 years ago

    Kerry Von Erich

    #3542 12 years ago

    Ivan Putski

    #3562 12 years ago

    Ron van dam

    #3567 12 years ago

    The repo man

    #3569 12 years ago

    Tommy dreamer

    #3576 12 years ago

    Evan bourne

    #3579 12 years ago

    Rey Mysterio

    #3583 12 years ago

    Jerry the king lawler

    #3587 12 years ago

    Chris Jericho

    #3593 12 years ago

    B Brian Blair

    #3607 12 years ago

    Grandmaster Sexay

    #3609 12 years ago

    Haystacks Calhoon

    #3612 12 years ago

    Dory Funk Jr

    #3619 12 years ago

    Abdullah the Butcher

    #3622 12 years ago

    Jeff Jarrett

    #3626 12 years ago

    Bam Bam Terry Gordy

    #3628 12 years ago

    Michael PS Hayes

    #3649 12 years ago

    Ted dibiase

    732 posts in this topic match your search for posts by rascal_h. You are on page 1 of 3.

    You're currently viewing posts by Pinsider rascal_h.
    Click here to go back to viewing the entire thread.

    This topic is closed.

    Reply

    Wanna join the discussion? Please sign in to reply to this topic.

    Hey there! Welcome to Pinside!

    Donate to Pinside

    Great to see you're enjoying Pinside! Did you know Pinside is able to run without any 3rd-party banners or ads, thanks to the support from our visitors? Please consider a donation to Pinside and get anext to your username to show for it! Or better yet, subscribe to Pinside+!


    This page was printed from https://pinside.com/pinball/forum/topic/500-giftcard-pinside-contest-begins-now?tu=rascal_h and we tried optimising it for printing. Some page elements may have been deliberately hidden.

    Scan the QR code on the left to jump to the URL this document was printed from.