Gottlieb
Gottlieb was an American arcade game corporation based in Chicago, Illinois. The main office and plant was located at 1140-50 N. Kostner Avenue until the early 1970s when a new modern plant and office was located at 165 W. Lake Street in Northlake, IL. A subassembly plant was located in Fargo, ND. The company was established by David Gottlieb in 1927, initially producing pinball machines while later expanding into various other games including pitch-and-bats, bowling games, and eventually video arcade games.
Like other manufacturers, Gottlieb first made mechanical pinball machines, including the first successful coin-operated pinball machine Baffle Ball in 1931. Electromechanical machines were produced starting in 1935. The 1947 development of player-actuated, solenoid-driven 2-inch bats called "flippers" revolutionized the industry. Players now had the ability to shoot the ball back up the playfield and get more points. The flippers first appeared on a Gottlieb game called Humpty Dumpty, designed by Harry Mabs. By this time, the games also became noted for their artwork by Roy Parker.
In the late 1950s the company made more widespread use of digital score reels, making multiple player games more practical as most scoring was expressed by cluttered series of lights in the back box. The score reels eventually appeared on single-player games, now known as "wedgeheads" because of their distinctive tapering back box shape. By the 1970s the artwork on Gottlieb games was almost always by Gordon Morison, and the company had begun designing their games with longer 3-inch flippers, now the industry standard.
The company made the move into solid state machines starting in the late 1970s. The first few of these were remakes of electromechanical machines such as Joker Poker and Charlie's Angels. By that time, multiple player machines were more the mode and wedgeheads were no longer being produced. The last wedgehead was T.K.O. and the last single player machine was Asteroid Annie and The Aliens.
Gottlieb was bought by Columbia Pictures in 1976. In 1983, after the Coca-Cola Company had acquired Columbia, Gottlieb was renamed Mylstar Electronics, but this proved to be short-lived. By 1984 the video game industry in North America was in the middle of a shakeout and Columbia closed down Mylstar at the end of September 1984. A management group, led by Gilbert G. Pollock, purchased Mylstar's pinball assets in October 1984 and continued the manufacture of pinball machines under a new company, Premier Technology. As a result of this a number of prototype Mylstar arcade games, which were not purchased by the investors, were never released. Premier did go on to produce one last arcade game, 1989's Exterminator. Premier Technology, which returned to selling pinball machines under the name Gottlieb after the purchase, continued in operation until the summer of 1996.
It was pinball keeping the company alive until the end. The issue was that Premier Technology bought a company called SMS with the hope of making video lottery and ultimately, slot machines. They were developing an electronic blackjack table game too. In gaming and video lottery, each jurisdiction requires a separate license and it takes a very long time to get approved. By 1996, Premier only had 1 or 2 jurisdictions approved to sell gaming machines.
In the meantime they were paying interest on the debt for buying SMS and the interest rates were high back in the early 1990s. So this debt sapped the company dry before they could get the video lottery/gaming division producing revenue, despite decent pinball sales.
Premier did not file for bankruptcy, but sold off all its assets for the benefit of its creditors.
Gottlieb's most popular pinball machine was Baffle Ball, and their final machine was Barb Wire.
Licensing and rights
Today, Gottlieb's pinball machines, as well as the "Gottlieb" and "D. Gottlieb & Co." trademarks, are owned by Gottlieb Development LLC of Pelham Manor, New York. Most of Gottlieb's video games are currently owned by Columbia Pictures.Gottlieb video games
Published
- No Man's Land - licensed from Universal
- New York! New York! - licensed from Sigma Enterprises
- Reactor
- Q*bert
- Mad Planets
- Krull
- Juno First - licensed from Konami
- M.A.C.H. 3 - laserdisc game; published under Mylstar name
- Us vs. Them - laserdisc game; published under Mylstar name
- The Three Stooges In Brides Is Brides - published under Mylstar name
- Q*bert Qubes - published under Mylstar name
- Curve Ball - published under Mylstar name
- Exterminator - published under Premier Technology name
Unreleased prototypes
- Argus - a.k.a. Videoman, Protector and Guardian
- Insector
- Arena - An earlier and simpler version of what became Wiz Warz
- Knightmare
- Faster, Harder, More Challenging Q*bert - developed under Mylstar name
- Screw Loose - developed under Mylstar name
- Tylz - developed under Mylstar name
- Video Vince and the Game Factory - developed under Mylstar name
- Wiz Warz - developed under Mylstar name
Gottlieb pinball machineshttp://www.ipdb.org/search.pl?mfgid=93&sortby=date&searchtype=advanced
Pure mechanical pinball/bagatelle machines
Incomplete list:- Bingo
- Baffle Ball
- Stop and Sock
- Mibs
- Baffle ball senior
- Play-Boy
- Brokers Tip
- Big Broadcast
- Sunshine Baseball
- Sweet Heart
Electromechanical pinball/flipperless machines
Incomplete list:- Relay
- Playboy
- Humpty Dumpty #1
- Miss America
- Lady Robin Hood
- Jack 'n Jill
- Olde King Cole
- K. C. Jones
- Bank-A-Ball #34
- Buffalo Bill
- Knock Out
- Triplets #40
- Minstrel Man
- Disc Jockey
- Skill Pool
- Queen of Hearts
- Quartette
- Quintette
- Gold Star
- Dragonette
- Diamond Lill
- Hawaiian Beaty
- Frontiersman
- Southern Belle
- Wishing Well #107
- Classy Bowler
- Rainbow
- Derby Day
- Harbor Lights
- Ace High
- World Champ
- Contest
- Criss Cross
- Queen of Diamonds
- World Beauties
- Around the world
- Dancing Dolls
- Flipper
- Texan
- Foto Finish
- Corral
- Cover Girls
- Flipper Clown
- Olympics
- Liberty Belle
- Rack-A-Ball
- Flying Chariots
- Gigi
- Slick Chick
- Sweet Hearts
- Swing Along
- Bowling Queen
- Happy Clown
- Ship Mates
- World Fair
- Kings & Queens
- Sky Line
- Paradise 2 player game
- Cow Poke
- Bank-A-Ball
- Central Park
- Dancing Lady
- Cross Town / Subway - last machines with manual ball lift
- Sing Along
- Super Score
- Surf Side
- "Four Seasons"
- Domino
- Fun Park
- Fun Land
- Paul Bunyan
- Royal Guard
- Hi-Lo
- Airport
- Road Race
- Groovy
- Aquarius
- Batter Up
- Flip-A-Card
- Snow Derby 2 player game
- Snow Queen 4 player game
- Dimension
- 4 Square
- 2001 #298
- Flying Carpet #310
- Jungle
- King Kool
- Outer Space 2 player game
- Jumping Jack /Jack In The Box
- Jungle King
- Wild Life
- Jungle
- Pro Pool
- Pro-Football
- Big Shot 2 player game
- Hot Shot 4 player game
- High Hand
- Top Card 1 player game
- Big Indian #356
- Far Out 4 player game
- Duotron 2 player game
- Magnotron 4 player game
- Sky Jump
- Super Soccer #367
- Quick Draw
- Fast Draw #379
- Abracadabra #380
- Spirit of 76 #381
- Spin Out
- Pioneer #382
- "300" #388
- Atlantis
- El Dorado
- Buccaneer
- Surf Champ
- Card Whiz 2 player version of Royal Flush
- Royal Flush 4 player version of Card Whiz
- Sure Shot
- Target Alpha
- Volley
- Solar City
- Bronco 4 player game
- Golden Arrow
- Fire Queen 2 player game
- Jet Spin 4 player game
- Mustang 2 player game
- Genie
- Team One
- Vulcan 4 player version of Fire Queen
- Cleopatra
- Fire Queen
- Gridiron
- Jacks Open
- Lucky Hand
- Jungle Queen 4 player version of Jungle Princess
- Jungle Princess
- Pyramid
- Strange World
- Neptune
- Sinbad
- Eye Of The Tiger
- Poseidon
- Hit the Deck
- Joker Poker
- Close Encounters of the Third Kind
- Dragon
- Gemini
- Rock Star
- Blue Note
- T.K.O.
- Space Walk
System 1 Pinball Machines
- Cleopatra #409
- Sinbad #412
- Joker Poker #417
- Dragon #419
- Solar Ride #421
- Charlie's Angels #425
- Close Encounters of the Third Kind #424 - 9,950 Solid State games and 470 Electro-Mechanical games made
- Count-Down #422 - 9,899 Games made
- Pinball Pool #427 - 7,200 Games made
- Totem #429 - 6,643 Games made
- The Incredible Hulk #433 - 6,150 Games made, a few of these games had System 80 electronics to test the new System 80 platform as model #500.
- Genie #435 - Wide body game. 6,800 Games made
- Buck Rogers #437 - 7,410 Games made
- Torch #438 - 3,880 Games made
- Roller Disco #440 - Wide body game with bright neon colors. 2,400 games made
- Asteroid Annie and the Aliens #442 - Only 211 games made
System 80 pinball machines
- Panthera #652
- The Amazing Spider-Man #653
- Circus #654
- Counterforce #656
- Star Race #657
- James Bond 007 #658
- Time Line #659
- Force II #661
- Pink Panther #664
- Mars God of War #666
- Volcano #667
- Black Hole #668
- Haunted House #669
- Eclipse #671
System 80A pinball machines
- Devil's Dare #670
- Rocky #672
- Spirit #673
- Punk! #674
- Caveman #PV810
- Striker #675
- Krull #676
- Q*bert's Quest #677 - based on the Q*bert video game
- Super Orbit #680
- Royal Flush Deluxe #681
- Goin' Nuts #682
- Amazon Hunt #684
- Rack 'Em Up! #685
- Ready...Aim...Fire! #686
- Jacks to Open #687
- Touchdown #688
- Alien Star #689A
- The Games #691
- El Dorado City of Gold #692
- Ice Fever #695
System 80B pinball machines
- Bounty Hunter #694
- Chicago Cubs Triple Play #696
- Rock #697
- Tag-Team Pinball #698
- Ace High #700 - never produced
- Raven #702
- Hollywood Heat #703
- Rock Encore #704 - conversion kit for Rock
- Genesis #705
- Spring Break #706
- Gold Wings #707
- Monte Carlo #708
- Arena #709
- Victory #710
- Diamond Lady #711
- TX-Sector #712
- Big House #713
- Robo-War #714
- Excalibur #715
- Bad Girls #717
- Hot Shots #718
- Bone Busters, Inc. #719
System 3 pinball machines
- Lights...Camera...Action! #720
- Silver Slugger #722
- Vegas #723
- Deadly Weapon #724
- Title Fight #726
- Car Hop #725
- Hoops #727
- Cactus Jack's #729
- Class of 1812 #730
- Amazon Hunt III #684D - conversion kit
- Surf 'N Safari #731
- Operation Thunder #732 - last Gottlieb machine to use an alphanumeric display
- Super Mario Bros. #733 - based on the Super Mario Bros. video game by Nintendo; first Gottlieb machine to use a dot-matrix display
- Super Mario Bros. - Mushroom World #N105
- Cue Ball Wizard #734
- Street Fighter II #735 - based on the Street Fighter II video game by Capcom; in 1995-1996, pinball machines were produced under the name Capcom, originally were made in the Gottlieb factory
- Tee'd Off #736
- Gladiators #737
- Wipe Out #738
- Rescue 911 #740
- World Challenge Soccer #741
- Stargate #742 - based on the Stargate movie
- Shaq Attaq #743 - starring Shaquille O'Neal
- Freddy: A Nightmare on Elm Street #744 - based on the A Nightmare on Elm Street movie series
- Frank Thomas' Big Hurt #745
- Waterworld #746 - based on the Waterworld movie
- Mario Andretti #747 - starring Mario Andretti
- Strikes 'n' Spares
- Barb Wire #748 - based upon the Barb Wire film and comic
- Brooks N' Dunn #749 - This game was entering production just as Gottlieb shut down and ceased operations. Two prototype machines supposedly exist, although some claim the design never proceeded past the whitewood stage. Playfield components, such as plastics, ramps, mechanisms and translites were produced for the games about to enter production; enough for about 10 games to exist. Only buggy prototype software exists and was never completed.