Travel Time, a classic electromechanical offering from the Spanish manufacturer Segasa, stands as a testament to the straightforward, high-tension gameplay of the late-era EM period. Built for the solo player, this machine eschews modern bells and whistles in favor of a pure, tactile experience driven by mechanical reels and the rhythmic clatter of its internal relays. Its design focuses on precision, tasking the player with navigating a playfield populated by a dense array of ten standup targets that demand both accuracy and a steady hand to clear.
The layout is deceptively simple, utilizing a pair of flippers and a trio of pop bumpers to keep the ball in constant, frantic motion across the board. The primary objective centers on the strategic utilization of the kick-out hole, which serves as the game’s focal point for scoring and advancing through its progression. Because the machine relies on classic reel-based scoring, every successful shot into the target bank carries the weight of a hard-earned victory. For the vintage enthusiast, Travel Time provides an uncluttered, challenging experience that strips away the complexity of modern rulesets to focus entirely on the fundamentals of ball control and target management.

