Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Legacy Archives

Oakland to lift 80-year pinball ban

Add as a preferred source on Google

The city of Oakland, CA is poised to decriminalize pinball this week after an eight-decade ban on the arcade staple that labeled them as gambling machines. (via San Francisco Chronicle)

In case you didn’t know about this odd footnote in gaming history, thousands of cities across the United States banned pinball machines in the 1930s. Flippers had not yet been added, so patrons would insert a nickel, pull back the plunger, and just hope for the best. Winners received cash payouts from the machines’ proprietors. Without flippers it was just a game of chance, and so police officers confiscated thousands of machines as part of a general crackdown on urban vice.

Recommended Videos

Flippers were invented in the ’40s, and by the ’50s and ’60s the machines were more popular than ever, so most cities simply let the laws drift into unenforced obscurity like so many blue laws. A handful of cities still maintain the ban, however, like Beacon, NY, where a pinball museum and arcade was shut down in 2010. San Francisco allows the machines, but only with a permit.

Oakland hasn’t enforced the ban since World War II, with machines regularly played at bars and arcades across the city, so lifting the ban is largely a symbolic gesture. The move is part of a broader effort from the city to reexamine its policies on gambling. In particular, the pinball bill is linked to a ban on Internet sweepstakes cafes where customers play online games of chance for cash payouts. The cafes have apparently acted as magnets for drugs, prostitution, and general hooliganism. The state of California is currently working to ban the cafes, but Oakland wants to get ahead of the curve.

The measure will go before the Oakland Public Safety Commission tomorrow, and if successful will pass on to the full city council in July.

Will Fulton
Former Staff Writer, Gaming
Will Fulton is a New York-based writer and theater-maker. In 2011 he co-founded mythic theater company AntiMatter Collective…
Sony wants AI to turn your gaming moments into shareable highlights
Sony's new patent could make sharing your gaming highlights as easy as playing the game.
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

If you have ever gone on an absolute rampage in a multiplayer game and wanted to share it, you know how painful the process is. You record, scrub through footage, clip the moment, edit it, and then finally share it. Sony wants to change all of that, and AI is at the center of it.

As discovered by MP1st, Sony Interactive Entertainment filed a patent application with the USPTO on May 5, 2026, under document ID "12616902," for an AI system that automatically selects your best gaming moments and turns them into shareable highlights, without you lifting a finger.

Read more
I hate scalpers, and Valve’s Steam Machine queue is exactly what we need
Valve may have found the right way to sell the Steam Machine
Steam Machine with Steam Controller

I hate scalpers. I especially hate scalpers when they swarm gaming hardware that already has limited availability. They buy it before regular customers and gamers can get a fair shot, and then relist it at cartoonish prices for the people who actually wanted to use it. We've seen this issue time and time again, but Valve's latest move might be the best anti-scalper weapon I've seen in a while.

Steam’s database now suggests Valve may already have a reservation queue system prepared for the upcoming Steam Machine. The discovery reportedly comes from a recent Steam update spotted by user Pepeizq, in which references to multiple Steam Machine packages appeared within the same reservation system code used for the Steam Controller.

Read more
Wordle is getting a TV show on NBC, and it already feels like a betrayal
Wordle is becoming an NBC primetime game show in 2027.
Woman playing Wordle on her smartphone.

Every morning, millions of people open Wordle, stare at a blank grid, and spend a few quiet minutes locked in a private battle with the five letters.

There is no host narrating your every move, no studio audience gasping when you waste a guess on a word, and absolutely nobody cheering you on. Just you, the word, and the slightly smug satisfaction of getting it right under three attempts.

Read more