.The tilt mechanism was invented in 1934 as a direct answer to the problem of players physically lifting and shaking the games. The tilt debuted in a game called Advance made by Harry Williams
Yea that's a good question. I would say to limit it, but the tilt mechanism is adjustable, so the owner could make it more sensitive, which could all but eliminate any nudging.It still leaves the question of whether the tilt sensor when introduced was intended by the designers to stop nudging or limit it?
It's not cheating for me and you on the modern tables, but for someone else it may be. Like I said, it's house rules. Plus we're talking about the old time machines, which were meant mostly for gambling. The owners who had to pay out may have strictly enforced a no-nudge policy.The very fact that games like TPA and Zen implement a nudging feature shows that it isn't cheating. They had to go out of their way to make it possible, as opposed to real tables.
Wasn't there a FS Employee who managed to save the pinball industry by displaying that because of nudging, pinball was a game of skill, not luck?
Yes this is exactly what I'm talking about. If a machine is used for gambling, you can bet the owners will try everything to discourage cheating, and nudging may have been cheating in the early days. In some other places, not so much. That is what I was calling "house rules".When I was a regular on the VPforums site, they had a banner on top of the site with "fun facts". If I remember correctly, one stated that "at some venues to discourage players from nudging the machine, nails were driven into the cabinet, potentially severely hurting some of the offending players". So even if some of the earliest pinball machines were meant to be nudged, not every propietor was condoning the practice evidently....