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Rolling Stones

Rolling Stones pinball machine (1979)

Release Date:

June 1979

Rolling Stones Gameplay & History

You can’t always get what you want, but you can get a great game out of Bally’s 1979 Rolling Stones — a celebrity-licensed slice of late-’70s rock and roll designed by Jim Patla with art by the great Greg Freres. With a healthy confirmed run of 5,700, this four-player put the world’s most famous rock band on the backglass and gave route players a clean, punchy solid-state layout: two flippers, three pops, a four-bank of drops, twin horseshoe lanes, and a kick-out hole, all humming with attitude.

The strategy, like the best Stones riffs, is built on a simple repeatable hook. The left orbit behind the drop target is the shot you play all day, a low-risk groove that keeps the points coming. The bonus system has a fun wrinkle worth knowing: rather than the usual build, lighting the 20-40-60 values comes from completing the 1-2-3-4-5 spot targets, a different rhythm from the standard bonus climb. And when the center target is lit and flashing, hitting it spots a letter in R-O-C-K — the easy, reliable way to pump your bonus multiplier and turn a steady game into a high score.

Rolling Stones is a terrific example of how the late-’70s licensed machines paired star power with tight, accessible design. It doesn’t ask much of you beyond learning that left orbit and watching for the flashing center target, but a player who works those two ideas patiently will climb the scoreboard. It’s loud, it’s catchy, and it captures the swagger of its namesakes without needing a single ramp or dot display. Groove the left orbit, spell ROCK, and let it bleed. Start me up.

Where to play Rolling Stones

1458 NE 25th Ave, Hillsboro, OR 97124
Total Pinballs: 86