Gameplay of Gottlieb's Slick Chick pinball machine created in 1963. Video courtesy of PAPA and the Replay Foundation. For more information, visit PAPA.org and ReplayFX.org.
This was the first pinball machine I ever played. My grandfather had this game in his basement since the 1970's. He recently sold it when he move into his new house. Thank's for filming this game, it brings back a lot of good memories from when I was younger .
I first saw this game at Sornie's. In fact, he had several of 'em at the time. He said "All the Collectors" wanted to own one of these. A month or so later, I went back to Sornie's to purchase a game. All of the Slick Chuck's were still...there. Some had tape on the coin drawers. I did ask him "Why the tape". He said that when keys get lost, some folk just put tape on/over the coin drawer to keep them from opening. He said; "No biggie; it's only tape"!
Only one I have seen was at Silverball in Asbury Park, NJ. Deceptive easy looking gameplay due to the lack of outlanes but the mini flippers will always get you. What is a real winner for this game though is the artwork. Slick chick apparently has something to do with women in bunny outfits and a crazy rabbit from Alice in Wonderland. Instantly caught my attention from the massive amount of EM's they have there.
Not sure why, but when I ran this video through my Chromecast, my cat was intrigued. He watched the entire video with his little head bopping up and down as the ball bounced around. Never seen him do it before!
I just fell Asleep, but that is OK because Pinball Ooozes out of all my Pores and there are now Pinball machines that can hold my attention longer when played and videoed for RUclips................
This was the first pinball machine I ever played. My grandfather had this game in his basement since the 1970's. He recently sold it when he move into his new house. Thank's for filming this game, it brings back a lot of good memories from when I was younger .
Seen this advertised in a old Billboard magazine so i had to check it out.. Slick chick was my name on the first computer chatline in the 80s.
I first saw this game at Sornie's. In fact, he had several of 'em at the time. He said "All the Collectors" wanted to own one of these. A month or so later, I went back to Sornie's to purchase a game. All of the Slick Chuck's were still...there. Some had tape on the coin drawers. I did ask him "Why the tape". He said that when keys get lost, some folk just put tape on/over the coin drawer to keep them from opening. He said; "No biggie; it's only tape"!
First played this game in 1972 at Segelken's Cottages in Appenzell Pa. Fond memories of that time.
Only one I have seen was at Silverball in Asbury Park, NJ. Deceptive easy looking gameplay due to the lack of outlanes but the mini flippers will always get you. What is a real winner for this game though is the artwork. Slick chick apparently has something to do with women in bunny outfits and a crazy rabbit from Alice in Wonderland. Instantly caught my attention from the massive amount of EM's they have there.
Sweet table. Good one for learning how to nudge! Looks so addictive.
That was pretty neat to see. I've never seen it in public ever. I can see why this'd be the #1 EM game on IPDb.
That gobble hole, though...
Not sure why, but when I ran this video through my Chromecast, my cat was intrigued. He watched the entire video with his little head bopping up and down as the ball bounced around. Never seen him do it before!
+Nightenstaff Isn't it obvious? Cats love pinball.
Cats love physics. Not kidding.
I just fell Asleep, but that is OK because Pinball Ooozes out of all my Pores and there are now Pinball machines that can hold my attention longer when played and videoed for RUclips................
Old school EM machines look hard to play.
+Riz2336 They're hard but, for me, they have that "just one more try" mentality.
Is it just me or has the footage from the over-head cameras on the recent PAPA videos looked stretched?
How is it fair for a gape to be that Huge