anyone that runs one of those with a K7000 and 8 ways are doing it wrong. it has zero bearing on the existence of the later model Midway 49 ways, which is what they were intended to be played with. (so there's no confusion, as I know legitimate pinball people that don't know the difference, the Bally pinball games were completely identical to the Williams ones, because they were Williams hardware the Bally name was just in name only like the Midway video game one)Īlso the Seattle/Vegas era games having 8 way support was for kits. 1100: Antique Circus Clown Shoes: Circus, Carnival, Amusement Park, Coin-Operated Amusements, Other Unique, Vintage Advertising. for trivia the other 2 "Bally/Midway" games that Williams produced were Tri-Sports (also 68k) and Trog (Williams Y-unit) part of the buyout deal entailed Williams releasing 4 games under the Bally/Midway name as if it were the old brand they subsequently adopted the Midway name for the video game division and rolled out the Bally name as an alternate pinball make shortly thereafter. Architectural, Circus, Carnival, Amusement Park, Coin-Operated Amusements, Other Unique, Vintage Advertising. 11780 agreement 857 11780 model 858 11774 behaviour 859 11773 significant. same with Pigskin, same development team of Brian Colin/Jeff Naumann/Dan Forden. there's no exceptions, the joysticks were Williams parts, and it was a Williams produced game. like the circuit board component was Midway's (MCR 68k), but the 49 way joysticks and sound boards (CVSD) were Williams. The shotgun is using a light beam to trigger photocells on the moving ducks. Midway Duck Hunt Shooting Arcade Game is an exciting game, and if you are a Baby Boomer, you played this game at one time. Arch Rivals was the first Bally/Midway game that Williams produced after buying them out. Midway Duck Hunt Shooting Arcade Game for rent is a classic arcade game released by Midway Manufacturing in 1973.