Bounty Hunter
Bounty Hunter Preview Image
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Support Our WorkBounty Hunter, released by D. Gottlieb & Co. in the late 1970s, emerged during a pivotal transition period in pinball history, just before the industry's shift to solid-state electronics. The machine captured the popular Western theme that was prevalent in American entertainment during this era, following the success of numerous Western films and television shows of the 1970s.
The game's design featured classic Western iconography, including cowboys, wanted posters, and frontier imagery. As one of the later electro-mechanical machines, Bounty Hunter incorporated sophisticated mechanical systems while maintaining the pure electro-mechanical gameplay that many enthusiasts cherish. The playfield likely included traditional targets, drop targets, and bumpers, arranged to create an engaging bounty hunting theme where players could 'track down' targets for increasing scores.
Bounty Hunter represents a significant piece of pinball history as one of the final machines produced during the electro-mechanical era. While production numbers are not widely documented, the game stands as a testament to the engineering excellence of Gottlieb's mechanical designers, who were able to create complex rule sets and scoring systems without the aid of modern electronics. The machine's release timing, just before the solid-state revolution, makes it particularly interesting to collectors and historians as it represents the culmination of decades of electro-mechanical pinball development.