Difference between revisions of "Star series"

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Revision as of 10:04, 1 December 2018

It has not been decided whether these should have separate pages. See Talk:Star series.
A Diamond 3 Star.

The Star series (for lack of a better term) describes the "second generation" of slot machines manufactured by Service Games and later Sega as a successor to the Sega Bell in around 1960. There are many machines in this group with slightly different rulesets, however what binds them is an almost standardised shell and internal workings (which in turn are not too dissimilar from the Sega Bell internals and may be interchangable).

The Star designs were created by Sega as opposed to the Sega Bell which is re-branded Mills High-Top. They are among the earliest, original works to bear the Sega name (though are thought to have debuted after the Sega 1000).

The series was followed by the Continental series.

Slot machines in the series

Multi-Bell 35

Promotional material

Console Sega

Gallery

Promotional material

Bonus Star

Gallery

Promotional material

Paybak Star

Promotional material

Mad Money Star

Gallery

Promotional material

Diamond 3 Star

Gallery

Promotional material

Diamond 4 Star

Promotional material

Bonanza Star

Gallery

Promotional material

Double Pay Star

Promotional material

Progressive Star

Gallery

Starlet

Strictly speaking the Starlet and the Monaco Starlet were not intended to be cutting-edge models when released, but were instead offered as an alternative to the Continental range for operators who preferred the cheaper, mechanical slot machines of yesteryear. The Starlet is a no-frills option designed with easier maintenance in mind.

Monaco Starlet

The Monaco Starlet is a no frills, purely mechanical machine, released when electronic solid state slot machines were becoming the norm.

Olympia Star

New Olympia

The Olympia Star was built to capitalise on the 1964 Summer Olympics (though was not officially endorsed by the International Olympic Committee. While Sega built the unit, sales and marketing were handled by Taito.

This particular model was controversial, sold only in the US-occupied Japanese islands of Okinawa and built to use tokens rather than real money to circumvent issues surrounding gambling. A company, Olympia Co., Ltd, was spun-off to produce these units, which inevitably became an entirely separate entity from Sega and Taito, producing further "Olympia" slot machines before fading away at some point. TODO look this up.

There was also another model called the Sega New Olympia, which had a skill stop feature, but also took tokens. The machine had a solenoid that released a fan stop, once the reels were stopped manually. At that point, the machine would complete the cycle much like a regular slot machine.


References