The present invention relates generally to arcade games, and more particularly to an arcade game with a rotating prize table where players attempt to remove a prize or target from the rotating table using a radially oriented vacuum mechanism. In a preferred embodiment, the game automatically replaces targets/prizes as they are swept or carried off the table.
Arcade games come in many shapes and sizes, from the early pinball games to the new video-centric consoles with large screens, sound effects, and virtual reality elements. However, the allure of actual physical game elements that can be maneuvered, aimed, shot, contacted, and won are still among the most popular types of games.
It is also known to have a game with a rotating playing field. U.S. Pat. No. 5,855,374, entitled “CRANE GAME INCLUDING VACUUM AND ROTARY TABLE,” by the present inventor illustrates a common type of arcade game with a rotating playing field. See also U.S. Pat. No. 8,568,214, entitled “ARCADE GAME WITH ROTATING AND COUNTER ROTATING POINTER AND TURNTABLE,” the contents of which are fully incorporated herein by reference.
Floor space in an arcade or other location where amusement games are displayed is always at a premium. For games to be profitable, they must maximize their potential to reach and capture many players to justify their presence in the arcade. One way to maximize the profitability of a game is to increase the number of players that may play a game at a given time. If a game can increase the opportunity for eight players to play instead of one, the game may optimize its potential earning capacity over single play games and generate additional excitement for multiple players. The present invention looks to increase the number of players who can play such a game by presenting a game that, while incorporating a rotating playing field, uses radially aligned target acquisition mechanisms that allow many players to stand or be seated around the game and each player can play simultaneously. This greatly increases the profitability of the game, and the cost to manufacture is less because each section is replicated from the first section.
The present invention is directed to an arcade game with a rotating playing field and a radially projecting mechanism for removing targets on the spinning board. Having the mechanism be radially projecting allows for more players by reducing the playing area that each player occupies. Prior art games required a pusher mechanism that moved in an arc along the surface, and thus required a lot of space to operate. In the present embodiment, the player controls a radially aligned vacuum device to capture and remove prizes from the playing field. A motorized control system may cause the pick-up device to continuously move back and forth and be controlled by a timer. The movement can be continuous as long as the game is powered up, or simply when the player initiates play. The control system motor starts and the vacuum unit motor also starts and the vacuum pump is turned on. A pulley on the vacuum unit is larger than the control unit and has a weaker clutch. Thus, as the control unit goes back and forth the vacuum unit it dragged along, always held against the control unit. The player pushes a down button and the vacuum motor reverses and goes down. The rotating playing surface can stop or keep spinning/moving, depending on a switch setting. If the prize wheel stops, the game is easier. When the vacuum cup makes contact with a surface of a prize or the playing surface, a switch causes the motor to reverse, causing the pick-up device to move upward. If the vacuum cup is on a prize the prize is picked up, and the vacuum switch locks to signal that there is a winner. If there is no winner, the vacuum cup does not stick to the wheel as the surface is such that it will not create a vacuum.
If there is a winner the vacuum cup and prize move forward to a stop, the pump is turned off, a valve releases the vacuum, and the prize drops into the prize chute to the player. The motor reverses; the vacuum pump is turned on, the unit moves to the other back stop. The vacuum cup then goes down into a tube holding reserve prizes. The uppermost prize is picked up, raised, moved forward a short time and the new prize is dropped onto the rotating circle. The game is now ready for another player. In a preferred embodiment, the game automatically replaces each displaced target/prize with a new target so that the game always maintains the same number of targets on the playing field. The replacement targets can be randomly dispersed or replaced at the exact location where the prize was removed. In the latter case, the replacement mechanism can be a prize dispenser located below the table that detects when a prize is removed and shifts a new prize from a stack of prizes into the position occupied previously by the old target. In an alternate embodiment, the player controls a pusher mechanism that sweeps a prize off the rotating table into a retrieval compartment that allows the player to collect the prize.
The present invention incorporates a rotating playing field in an arcade game such as the type described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,991,230 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,559,552, the contents of each of which are fully incorporated herein by reference. The present invention differs from the earlier games in that it is a multi-player game where players compete concurrently on the same playing field, thereby increasing the opportunity for participation and the revenues for the game operator. The playing field 20 rotates in the direction of arrow 21 by a conventional motor arrangement well known in this art and omitted herein for brevity. In the center of the playing field may be a circular opening 22 that is divided into pie shaped sectors 24 that correspond to a separate player station. That is, each player station has an associated sector of the playing field opening 22 defined by dividers 26 emanating radially from a central pole 28. Each sector 24 leads to a compartment below the playing field 20 that is accessible to a player at the corresponding player station. Alternately, the player's retrieval compartment 114 may be adjacent the player on the periphery of the playing field.
On the playing field is a number of prizes or targets 30, which can be poker chips, baseball cards, gift cards, playing cards, tokens, or other symbolic or actual value objects that can be collected by a player. For example, gift cards having a monetary value that can be redeemed later at the arcade, or other restaurants or stores, can be used in the game and take up much less space that other conventional arcade game prizes, allowing the game operator to spend less time refilling the game prizes. The prizes may vary in value, creating a competition among players for the best prizes, or the prizes may all have the same value.
The player thus maneuvers the pick-up device along the radial line associated with his or her playing station 50, and then lowers the pick-up device onto a prize as it rotates below on the rotating playing surface 20. If the pick-up device lands on a prize, the pick-up device carries the prize 30 to the sector 24 associated with the playing station, where the prize is released by removing the vacuum from the pick-up device. The prize then falls into the sector, where it can be claimed by the player in the retrieval bin.
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Each of these various embodiments are intended to be illustrative of the greater concept of the invention and not limiting in any way. The drawings are not intended to be limiting, but rather teach the aspects of the invention in various ways. Accordingly the scope of the invention is properly construed as rendered by the appended claims, using the ordinary meanings, without limitation to any specific description or depiction herein.