Difference between revisions of "Olympia Star"

From Sega Retro

m
m
Line 5: Line 5:
 
| system=Slot machine
 
| system=Slot machine
 
| releases={{releasesArcade
 
| releases={{releasesArcade
| slot_date_jp=1964
+
| slot_date_jp=1964{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20230821093301/http://thetastates.com/eremeka/1969prior.html}}
 
}}
 
}}
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 04:35, 21 August 2023

n/a

OlympiaStar SlotMachine.jpg
Olympia Star
System(s): Slot machine
Publisher: Olympia
Developer:
Release Date RRP Code
Slot machine
JP
¥? ?





































This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.


Olympia Star (オリンピア・スター) is a slot machine released in Japan around 1964 which reuses the shell of the Star series.

In the early 1960s, most forms of gambling were outlawed in Japan, and while various iterations of Sega produced slot machines, these are thought to have been for export around the pacific region, often in US-occupied territories were gambling laws were more relaxed. The Olympia Star is thought to have been produced to circumvent these limitations - while similar in design to Sega's other Star slot machines, it has three action buttons at the front of the unit, giving players control over when the reels would stop. The argument was therefore made that the Olympia Star was a game of skill rather than a game of chance, and so did not qualify as gambling.

The exact history of the Olympia Star is not fully understood, although it is thought to have been named as such to cash in on the 1964 Summer Olympics (without any license to do so by the International Olympic Committee). Olympia Stars were also designed to use tokens which could be exchanged for money - a precursor to the "medal" system popularised by rival firm Sigma some years later (although some were illegally modified to accept real money). They were likely only ever sold in Japan.

Taito also claims responsibility for the invention, suggesting that Sega copied their idea. In a later agreement, Taito and Sega are thought to have co-founded a company (Olympia Co., Ltd, unrelated to the later pachislot manufacturer) specifically to market these machines (and their successors), with Sega manufacturing the products and both companies sharing the profit from sales.

The Olympia Star would be followed by the New Olympia later in the decade.

Gallery

References

  1. http://thetastates.com/eremeka/1969prior.html (Wayback Machine: 2023-08-21 09:33)


SoR2-CashBag-Sprite.png
Sega gambling machines
Classic
Bell series
Sega Bell (1956) | Sega Bell Classic (195x) | Multiple Bell (195x) | Multiple Bell Classic (195x) | Electro-Bell (1958) | Copper Sega (1963)
Star series
Bonanza Star (1962) | Bonus Star (19xx) | Paybak Star (19xx) | Diamond 3 Star (1960) | Diamond 4 Star (19xx) | Double-Pay Star (19xx) | Mad Money Star (195x) | Progressive Star (1962) | Console Sega (19xx) | Multi-Bell 35 (19xx) | Starlet (196x) | Monaco Starlet (196x) | Copper Star (196x)
Continental series
Continental Bonus (19xx) | Continental 3 Star (19xx) | Continental Progressive (19xx) | Continental Bonanza (19xx) | Continental Mad Money (19xx) | Continental Bulk Pay (19xx) | Continental Big Jack (19xx) | Continental Grand Prix (19xx) | Continental Mark 10 (19xx) | Continental Mark 20 (19xx) | Continental South Seas (19xx)
Windsor series
Windsor Aztec (1974) | Windsor Bonus (1974) | Windsor Buccaneer (19xx) | Windsor Crazy Bells (19xx) | Windsor Crown (1974) | Windsor Derby (1974) | Windsor Imperial (19xx) | Windsor Mad Money (1974) | Windsor Playboy (19xx) | Windsor Sailor (19xx) | Windsor Speedway M1 (19xx) | Windsor Speedway M2 (19xx) | Windsor Vegas (19xx) | Windsor Victory (19xx) | Windsor Wild Joker (1974)
Olympia series
Olympia Star (1964) | New Olympia (1969) | Olympia Mark II (1971) | Olympia Mark III (1972) | Olympia Golden Star (1974)
Others
Ascot (1966) | Mini-Sega (1958) | Lord Sega (196x) | Clover Bell (1960) | Black Jack (196x) | Bonus Line (1974) | Lucky Double (1974) | Bonus Twin (1974)
Modern
JPM International
Sonic the Hedgehog (1997) | Around the World in 80 Days (1997) | Planet Tours (1997) | Analog to Digital (1998) | Big Trader (1998) | Penguin's Fishing (1998) | Soccer Crazy (1998) | Club Firecracker (2003)
Pachinko
CR UFO Catcher (1998) | CR Sonic (2003) | CR Sakura Taisen (2007) | CR Virtua Fighter (2008) | Pachinko CR Sakura Taisen 2 (2010) | CR Ryu ga Gotoku Kenzan! (2011) | Pachinko CR Virtua Fighter Revolution (2012) | CR Persona 4 the Pachinko (2015) | CR Ryu ga Gotoku Kenzan! Tenshou Gion-hen (2015) | Pachinko CR Puyo Puyo (2017)
Pachislot
Jet Set Radio (2003) | Sakura Taisen (2005) | Virtua Fighter (2007) | Sonic Live! (2008) | Pachislot Puyo Puyo! (2011) | Pachislot Sakura Taisen 3 (2011) | Pachislot Sakura Taisen 3: Loop Ver. (2012) | Virtua Fighter Pachislot (2014) | Pachislot Bayonetta (2015) | Pachislot Devil Survivor 2: The Last Seven Days (2015) | Pachislot Ryu ga Gotoku of the End (2015) | Pachislot Chain Chronicle (2018) | Pachislot Sakura Taisen: Atsuki Chishio Ni (2017) | Pachislot Senjou no Valkyria (2018) | Pachislot Phantasy Star Online 2 (2020) | Pachislot Persona 5 (2022)
Others
M3001 (19xx) | M3002 (19xx) | M3003 (19xx) | M3004 (19xx) | M4001 (1989) | M4002 (19xx) | M5001 (19xx) | Sevens Plus (199x) | Bonanza Bros. (2010) | Golden Axe (2010) | House of the Dead: Scarlet Dawn Battle Genesis (2019) | Virtua Fighter Battle Genesis (2019) | NiGHTS Dream Wheel (2021)