A sun-drenched escape — Capri is an electromechanical single-player from Chicago Coin, one of the pioneering names of the earliest coin-op amusement industry, and it comes from a deep design team including John Gore, Jerry Koci, Albin Peters, and Al Schlappa, with art by the legendary Roy Parker. With light-based scoring, it’s a woodrail-era piece whose greatest calling card is that distinguished creative pedigree, evoking the glamour of the famous Italian island.
The available layout details on this machine are limited, but its provenance speaks volumes. Chicago Coin was one of the industry’s true foundational manufacturers, and Roy Parker was among the finest artists the medium ever produced, responsible for the warm, characterful artwork that gave so many classic machines their storybook soul. Even where the specific playfield documentation is thin, the machine represents the reliable craftsmanship of a pioneering manufacturer paired with a legendary artist. The Capri theme, evoking the sun-drenched Mediterranean island, gave Parker’s illustration a glamorous, escapist canvas typical of the era’s travel-themed titles.
Capri is a piece of history for the collector who cherishes the earliest chapters of the hobby and the great talents who shaped it. Chicago Coin’s deep bench of designers and Roy Parker’s artistry give the machine a genuinely notable pedigree, and owning or playing one is a small brush with pinball’s foundational era. Documentation on the specifics is modest, which only adds to the intrigue for those who love chasing the deeper corners of the catalog. For anyone who reveres the roots of the game, it’s a worthy find — a machine whose value lies as much in the names behind it as in the play itself. Escape to the island and drop a coin. (Note: detailed layout data for this title is limited.)

