Super Orbit
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Support Our WorkSuper Orbit, released by D. Gottlieb & Co. in the early 1980s, emerged during a transformative period in pinball history when solid-state electronics were becoming the industry standard. The space-themed machine captured the public's continued fascination with cosmic exploration and sci-fi entertainment of the era.
The game's design featured a space-age aesthetic common to early 1980s pinball machines, with artwork likely depicting planetary bodies, spacecraft, and cosmic phenomena. As a solid-state machine, it incorporated electronic sound effects and digital scoring, moving beyond the mechanical chimes and scoring drums of earlier eras while maintaining the electro-mechanical flippers and bumpers that defined classic pinball gameplay.
While not among Gottlieb's most celebrated titles, Super Orbit represented the company's continued innovation during a highly competitive period in pinball manufacturing. The early 1980s saw manufacturers competing to incorporate new electronic features while maintaining the fundamental mechanical aspects that made pinball engaging. The machine likely featured standard elements of the era such as multiball capability, electronic sound effects, and various orbital-themed scoring objectives.