Slick Chick
Slick Chick Preview Image
Machine Details
Manufacturer
n/a
Year
n/a
Technology Era
n/a
Machine Description
Content Under Review
Help us improve this content
Your support accelerates our content verification efforts.
Support Our WorkSlick Chick, released by D. Gottlieb & Co. in 1963, represents a classic example of early 1960s pinball design and artwork. The machine emerged during a period when pinball was experiencing strong popularity in American entertainment culture, particularly in arcades and bowling alleys.
The playfield design followed Gottlieb's proven formula of the era, featuring standard pop bumpers, multiple rollovers, and scoring lanes. The art package, typical of the early 1960s, likely featured attractive female character artwork (the 'chick' referenced in the title) combined with bold typography and dynamic color schemes that were characteristic of the period's aesthetic sensibilities.
As an electro-mechanical machine from this era, Slick Chick would have utilized relay-based scoring mechanisms and chimes or bells for sound effects. The game would have been equipped with the standard two-inch scoring reels of the period, displaying points through mechanical number wheels visible through the backglass. While not necessarily a revolutionary game in terms of innovations, it represents an important piece of pinball history from a period when mechanical games were at their technological peak, just before the advent of solid-state electronics.
While production numbers are not definitively known, most Gottlieb games from this period typically saw production runs between 1,000 and 3,500 units. Today, Slick Chick is considered a collectible piece, particularly appreciated for its representation of early 1960s pinball art and design sensibilities.