What Is Pachinko

What Is Pachinko

May 13 2021

What Is Pachinko

Pachinko is sometimes described as “vertical pinball,” but that’s an insult to pinball. Pinball is a game of real skill. Pachinko—despite all its advocates may protest—is not. In pachinko, you fire balls, 100 per minute, up a chute onto a field of nails with holes at the bottom. The balls bounce through the nails. Gambling in Japan: Pachinko パチンコ. Nik Yasko examines Japan's popular punt. Listen to the real sounds of pachinko. Read more on Pachinko. 60% OFF Try the Japanese entertainment 'Pachinko' in Tokyo! Commonly mistranslated as 'vertical pinball,' pachinko is a noisy, smoky, time-consuming, and hypnotic form of gambling that plays a huge part in the Japanese economy.

Pachinko is a gambling game played in japan most comonly found in tokyo. Whoever said its a word for prostitue has some serious issues...
Ms. hanasta went to play pachinko with her american friends.
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The process of searching a building for an empty bathroom. A successful bowl search typically relieves the frustration of uncomftorably defecating around others, although in less frequent cases the desire to urinate alone is a factor. Bowl searching can be done anywhere although it is most prevelant on college campuses.
'In college I did a lot of bowl searching.'
'Sam went to the bathroom like 20 minutes ago. Jeez, what's taking so long?'
'He's probably bowl searching.'
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What Is Pachinko
(n), (u)
1) one of the sources of funds for North Korea. Up to 30 percent of the pachinko industry is controlled by North Koreans and Japanese of Korean descent in Japan, and at least US $100 million a year is funneled across the Sea of Japan into their homeland via the Chongryon and North Korean-controlled banks
Do not want to play pachinko. Pachinko money does make street children in North Koreastarve to death.
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What hell is PACHINKO!? PACHINKO is had only JAPAN. and most popular gambling
If you don't know, you never Tell about Japanese culture.
Come on! Try this game!
by Bastardized Bottomburp July 24, 2003
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Vagina; a shy way to refer to one's pussy. As used by Dr. Reid on the television show Scrubs.
So there's a swelling on your, um... on your pachinko?
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A noisy game that you play with many little balls.
I likeplaying pachinko in a room full of strangers.
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A noisy game that you play with many little balls.
I likeplaying pachinko in a room full of strangers.
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Pachinko

This article relates to Pachinko

'If you are a rich Korean, there's a pachinko parlor in your background somewhere,' Min Jin Lee writes in her novel Pachinko. Several of her Korean characters end up working in pachinko parlors, despite their differing levels of education and their previous experience.
Pachinko is essentially an upright pinball machine. Gamblers pay to borrow a set of small steel balls that are loaded into the contraption. Pressing a spring-loaded handle launches them onto a metal track lined with brass pins and several cups. The aim is to bounce the balls off the pins and get them to land in the cups before they fall down the hole at the bottom. A ball landing in a cup triggers a payout, in the form of extra balls dropping into the tray at the front. Officially, there is no monetary payout because gambling for cash was until recently illegal in Japan; instead, balls are exchanged for tokens or small prizes like pens or chocolate bars, or more balls. Usually though, there is a storefront near the pachinko parlor where the tokens can be exchanged for cash or grocery vouchers.
First invented in Japan in the 1920s, pachinko became popular after the end of World War II. By the 1980s fully mechanical machines were starting to be replaced by ones that incorporate electronic features, such as an animated screen. In 2002 it was estimated that 30 million Japanese play pachinko on a regular basis, spending $200 billion a year. Gambling addiction is a perennial and serious concern. A 2011 CNN Travel article certainly makes a pachinko parlor sound like a hypnotic atmosphere:

Entering one of these ubiquitous gambling establishments for the first time is like stumbling upon another dimension. A non-stop barrage of loud, futuristic zaps and pings greets you through a fluorescent haze, fogged with clouds of cigarette smoke. Narrow aisles are lined with row after row of near-identical game machines that players sit facing, side-by-side and back-to-back for hours on end.

Because of the air of near-illegality that surrounds pachinko, it has been viewed as one of the few acceptable professions for Koreans living in Japan. 'It has long been considered a dirty business, and so run by those on the edge of society. For this reason, Korean ownership of pachinko parlors is common,' an article on JapanVisitor.com explains.
In the twenty-first century, pachinko has been in decline for two major reasons. One is the Japanese government's intention to open casinos (casino gambling was legalized in December 2016). The other is pachinko's fusty image. Young people raised on video games are likely to see it as an old-fashioned activity for the previous generation. The industry has responded by trying to spruce up pachinko parlors, making them cleaner and in some cases smoke-free. There are also new electronic elements to the machines that are meant to mimic features of online gaming.
It remains to be seen whether pachinko, for many decades a legal gray area, will survive in Japan's new era of legalized gambling.
See this Guardiangallery of photos from pachinko parlors.
Click on the video below to see a game of Pachinko in action:


Picture of Japanese Pachinko parlor by Tischbeinahe

Filed under Cultural Curiosities

Article by Rebecca Foster
What Is Pachinko

This 'beyond the book article' relates to Pachinko. It originally ran in February 2017 and has been updated for the November 2017 paperback edition. Go to magazine.

What Is Pachinko

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What Is Pachinko

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