Punchy the Clown (AGC, 1993) , SMB (Premier, 1992) , SMBMW (Premier, 1992) , Cybernaut (Bally, 1985), Lady Luck (BLY, 1986) , Beat the Clock (BLY, 1985), and Pistol Poker (AGC, 1993).
Some examples unfavorable in pinball history due to release timing, negative propaganda by competing companies, and/or which resulted in low production runs, but not quality of gameplay.
Separately, but not pure pinball, some shuffle bowlers get a bad reputation as well, mostly due to quality of construction for games after the 1970s, or those made with "fake" non full pins and baseboard switches. Those that are "old" are the collectible games, but there are still some good nuggets up to the 1990s. I am partial to the 1965-1969 Bally Bowler with the soft pins, even though other companies are equitable with hard pins. A TRUE contact "fly away" shuffle bowler.
Yet another category are pinball esque games like Bromley's "Little Pro", a remake of Williams 1964 "Mini Golf".
Quite fun, yet not collectible comparative to say modern versions of pitch and bat like Slugfest! to their older EM counterparts, especially with 'running man' units.