It's not quite impossible. Modern Pinball in NYC has none of that, nothing but pinball (just a few tiny souvenir items like t-shirts) and seems to be doing fine. Of course NYC is an outlier in terms of available audience and foot traffic.
It uses the pay-per-time model (1 hour / 3 hours / all day), which I think seems to be more successful than pay-per-game for a place with enough machines (20+). Silverball Museum in NJ is also like that, with only the games (video along with pinball, but no food service), and has been in business for quite a while.
I like the pay-per-time model. I'd easily pay 5 bucks for an hour moreso than pay 5 bucks for 5 plays.
Definitely a jukebox of some kind and a pool table or two. Maybe some digital dart boards. I also wouldn't start with all brand new high end machines. Sprinkle in some older DMD and system 11 at least. Keep the start up costs down. Classic arcade always a hit too. Ms Pac Man, Donkey Kong, Street Fighter, etc.
Fun to dream about something like this, but you'd really have to find the perfect location to get it to fly.
Admission to the Pinball Gallery provides access to most of our games, which are set on free-play (no coins required!). Admission rates are as follows:
$8 - one hour of play
$20 - play all-day (re-entry is OK... go out for lunch/dinner and come back and play!)
We also sell the following extended passes:
$50 - monthly pass
$250 - yearly pass
If you purchase a monthly or yearly pass, you receive a free Pinball Gallery "Player Card" that can be used for free admission anytime during that period, including our monthly tournaments, and weekly league.
We also offer the following reduced admission passes:
$5 - "Lunch-time special": On weekdays, anytime during the period from 11:30am-1:30pm, admission is reduced to $5/hour. Bring your lunch (we also sell drinks and snacks). Bring a friend. Have some fun playing plnball and classic video games!
If you are in hurry and only have time for a game or two, we also have something for you. There are a few games at the front of the store that are available for coin-play (no admission necessary).
$7 for 1, $10 for 2. That's fills my happy spot. Since I've only heard of these pay/time places, I always wondered how the time was policed. Question, how are these places policed?
I’ve only gone at lunch time to my local place and it’s completely on the honor system. But we’re also talking about a lunch special that attracts people at their lunch hour that would likely have to get back to work anyway. If you’re a regular lunch timer at some point the membership option is cheaper and then it doesn’t matter how long they stay.
There's a clear advantage to having an entry fee and then everything set to free play; you don't have to worry about theft from the machines. ... If you were able to have each machine read the bracelet so that it knew to work or not based on if their time was still valid, that'd be awesome.
This stuff has already been solved. Dave and Busters has had that for ten-plus years, a card system without actual coins going into the machines. Chuck-e-Cheese has introduced an unlimited-play-per-time option also based on a card or bracelet scanned at each machine. Of course the big chains have more capital to install the hardware on each machine, but it certainly exists and has for some time.
Oh. So then would it be possible to then set up a card system that's timed? Is that how it's done?
This is a primary reason why the Museum of Pinball in Banning is only open a few times a year. From this LA Times article: “It’s 45,000 square feet of pinball. Just to flip the electrical breakers, it costs a few thousand dollars.”I always wondered about the electric bill for arcades. I know just for one pin, I can go online and see my current electric usage and it spikes way up when I’m playing (maybe the old pins were less efficient and used more juice?). I couldn’t imagine how much electricity the huge arcades guzzle, espcially when you throw in the Cali heat and constant AC. I imagine most of the mall arcades had their utilities included back in the day or they would’ve shut down even sooner than they did.