This book provides a complete survey of the ultimate 20th-century toy, the graphic artistry, the technical innovations-from the 1930s, when the game was little more than coin-operated bagatelle, to the present day, when machines talk back. Pinball is also a peerless reference work, including an exhaustive list of all the machines ever made in the United States.
The guys were maybe a bit too Trekkish, phasers-on-stun for complete comfort; but anyway, a lot of fun. Only thing is it could've used even more pictures of the games (also the text and pix could've been coordinated better). Anyway, they mentioned Old Chicago and Royal Flush--so I'm satisfied.