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Carnival game

A carnival game is a game of chance or skill that can be seen at a traveling carnival, charity fund raiser, amusement arcade and amusement park, or on a state and county fair midway. They are also commonly played on holidays such as Mardi Gras, Saint Patrick's Day, and Oktoberfest.

Children playing a competitive racing game in Amsterdam.

Carnival games are usually operated on a "pay per play" basis. Prices may range from a small amount, for example 25 cents, to a few dollars per play. Most games offer a small prize to the winner. Prizes may include items like stuffed animals, toys, or posters. Continued play is encouraged as multiple small prizes may be traded in for a larger prize. Multiplayer games — the "Watergun" game is one example—may change the size of the prize with the number of players. In a more difficult game, including the "Baseball and Basket" or "Stand the Bottle", a large prize may be awarded to any winner.

Carnival games have a poor reputation in some areas. This may be that some carnival games utilize optical illusions or physical relationships that make it hard for a player to judge the game's difficulty. Also, some operators have run games that are rigged to take advantage of unsuspecting players. In many areas, these games are tested by local law enforcement to find unfairly run games.

Carnival game operators edit

At amusement parks, the carnival games are usually owned and operated by the park owner. The games are usually installed in permanent buildings stationed around the park. A traveling carnival may, however, be made up of multiple independent game concession owners. These independents owners contract their games with the carnival operator.[1][2]: 25–26  Carnival games of this type are mounted to towable trailers that enable the game to be moved from site to site. However, there are still some free-standing game booths that are assembled on site. These carnival games are usually set up in rows along the midway area along with the rides.

Types of carnival games edit

Games of chance edit

 
The Duck Pond Game

Games of chance are favorite carnival games. A random outcome gives all players the chance of winning a prize. An example of a carnival game of chance is the "Dime Pitch" game. The objective is to toss a coin (typically a dime or quarter) onto a horizontal board that has random marks on it. The marks on the board are the same diameter as the coin thrown. By completely covering the mark on the board with the coin, the player wins. Another example of a game of chance is the "Birthday" game. Players place their bets on a rail mounted strip that has months, colors and holidays written on it. Many players choose the month of their birth for their bet. A random player is then selected to throw a large multisided die into a designated center area (play area) of the booth. The die thrown has corresponding months, colors and holidays written on the different sides. The month, color or holiday that shows on the top of the thrown die, when it stops, will indicate the winner.

In "Pingpong Ball and Fish Bowl" players throw pingpong balls at a table filled with rows of empty small fish bowls. If the player gets a ball in the bowl, they usually win a goldfish. A game like "Duck Pond," which is geared for young children, may offer a winner every time. The player selects a rubber duck that is floating at random in water. Writing on the bottom of the duck reveals the prize won.

A shooting gallery in Japan, 2019

Games of skill edit

 
Shooting game at a mole festival in San Pedro Atocpan, Mexico City

Games of skill are another favorite carnival game. These games may test a players aim at hitting a target with either a ball or a weapon. Some games of this type are the "Cross Bow Shoot", the "Milk Bottle" game, or the "Balloon and Dart" game.

Other skill testing games challenge the physical abilities of the player. One example of this type of game is the "Rope Ladder Climb". In this game, the player must keep their balance while climbing an angled rope ladder that can pivot and invert the player. The object of the game is to climb the ladder, without falling off, and ring a bell at the end of the climb. Another game that tests the physical abilities of the player is "Ring the Bell". The player uses a large mallet to strike a pivot board on the game, this causes an indicator to be driven vertically up an indicator scale board. By hitting the pivot hard enough, the indicator will ring a bell mounted at the top of the indicator scale board indicating a win. Cover the spot is a game that involves covering a giant red spot with five smaller discs dropped by hand; all red (or color) must be covered to win.[3]

"Rigged" carnival games edit

 
The ball and bucket game

Carnival games are often viewed or portrayed as dishonest, due to past history that may not necessarily apply to modern-day games and operators. The term "mark" (meaning sucker) originated with the carnival.[4]

When dishonest carnival game operators found someone who they could entice to keep playing their rigged (slang term: "gaffed") game,[5] they would then "mark" the individual by patting their back with a hand that had chalk on it. Other game operators would then look for these chalk marks and entice the individuals to also play their rigged game.[4]

Rigging a carnival game may be done in many different manners depending on the game. For example, the "Ball and Basket" game may be rigged by moving the "A" frame onto which the basket is mounted. This would change the trajectory of the ball. Another method has the operator leaving a ball in the basket for the demonstration which absorbs the energy of the tossed ball, enabling the ball to stay in the basket, and then remove it when the mark plays, which makes the ball much more susceptible to bouncing out. In a game like "Ring Toss", the blocks that the prizes are attached to are cut in such a way as to ensure the ring will not fit. The "Balloon and Dart" game can be rigged by underinflating the balloons or by using dull point darts. Some games may be rigged to play honestly or dishonestly and can be switched by the game operator. The "Milk Bottle" game can be rigged this way. On a rigged game, one of the milk bottles is heavier than the others. Depending on how the bottles are stacked will determine if the player will win.[4]

Some games are simply impossible to win. One such game is the "Push 'em Up" (or "Stand the Bottle")[6] game, which requires the player to stand up a bottle with a 2-tine plastic fork, was featured in episode 5 of Penn & Teller Tell a Lie. The bottles used in the game are weighted on one side, which makes it impossible to stand the bottles upright without tipping them over when the heavier side is rotated to the top. The "Bottle Up," often confused with this game, is simply a skill game where the player uses a fishing pole with a ring attached to the end of the string to stand up the bottle.

By rigging the game, the game operators can vastly increase the money they take in.

In many areas, local law enforcement will test the carnival games prior to and during the carnival to help eliminate rigged games.[7] However, there are still some dishonest game operators. One method they use to avoid law enforcement is to give legitimate instruments or make the carnival game "fair-and-square" during testing, but rig it for other people.[4][8]

Racist carnival games in the U.S. edit

In the United States, there was a longtime tradition of carnival games the point of which was to hurt, dehumanize or denigrate Black people. Such games included "African dodger" or "bean-em", where a Black person would stick their head through a curtain to be pelted with beanbags, eggs or baseballs, or "dunk tanks" that would drop a Black person into a tank of water if fairgoers hit a target with a ball. In her 2020 book Caste, Isabel Wilkerson describes these games as part of "a culture of cruelty [that] made violence and mockery seem mundane and amusing", teaching and reinforcing the U.S. racial caste system through entertainment.[9]

Carnival game photos edit

List of carnival games edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Carneytown - Planning-Ride Company and Vendors 2009-01-22 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ a b c d e Nickell, Joe (2005). Secrets of the sideshows. Lexington, Ky.: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-7179-2. OCLC 65377460.
  3. ^ "The Cover the Spot carnival game". Retrieved 2016-05-25.
  4. ^ a b c d "Chicanery On The Midway" PAC-C.org (Professionals Against Confidence Crime) Deputy Marshal Dave Goldenberg's article: 2001
  5. ^ "Unbalanced Reel Gaming Machines" 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine Tim Falkiner & Roger Horbay's Abstract: September 9, 2006 page 4 "The Gaffed Milk Bottle Game"
  6. ^ src="https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/13e2d53b8dc2052e7e90a51559413ddc?s=96, <img class="avatar" alt="Marissa Laliberte"; #038;d=mm; Laliberte, #038;r=g" width="50" height="50">Marissa. "Your Favorite Carnival Games Are Rigged—Here's How". Reader's Digest. Retrieved 2023-09-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ "Police officer-magician shows kids tricks of carnival games" Teresa Stepzinski, The Times-Union Brunswick News March 28, 2002
  8. ^ "How to beat carnival games" 2007-05-12 at the Wayback Machine essortment article by Pagewise 2002
  9. ^ Wilkerson, Isabel (2020). Caste: the origins of our discontents (First ed.). New York. p. 149. ISBN 978-0-593-23025-1. OCLC 1147928120.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

External links edit

  • [1] - A website that explains how a few carnival games are designed and how they can be won.

carnival, game, song, cheap, trick, carnival, game, song, nintendo, video, game, carnival, games, carnival, game, game, chance, skill, that, seen, traveling, carnival, charity, fund, raiser, amusement, arcade, amusement, park, state, county, fair, midway, they. For the song by Cheap Trick see Carnival Game song For the Wii and Nintendo DS video game see Carnival Games A carnival game is a game of chance or skill that can be seen at a traveling carnival charity fund raiser amusement arcade and amusement park or on a state and county fair midway They are also commonly played on holidays such as Mardi Gras Saint Patrick s Day and Oktoberfest Children playing a competitive racing game in Amsterdam Carnival games are usually operated on a pay per play basis Prices may range from a small amount for example 25 cents to a few dollars per play Most games offer a small prize to the winner Prizes may include items like stuffed animals toys or posters Continued play is encouraged as multiple small prizes may be traded in for a larger prize Multiplayer games the Watergun game is one example may change the size of the prize with the number of players In a more difficult game including the Baseball and Basket or Stand the Bottle a large prize may be awarded to any winner Carnival games have a poor reputation in some areas This may be that some carnival games utilize optical illusions or physical relationships that make it hard for a player to judge the game s difficulty Also some operators have run games that are rigged to take advantage of unsuspecting players In many areas these games are tested by local law enforcement to find unfairly run games Contents 1 Carnival game operators 2 Types of carnival games 2 1 Games of chance 2 2 Games of skill 3 Rigged carnival games 4 Racist carnival games in the U S 5 Carnival game photos 6 List of carnival games 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksCarnival game operators editAt amusement parks the carnival games are usually owned and operated by the park owner The games are usually installed in permanent buildings stationed around the park A traveling carnival may however be made up of multiple independent game concession owners These independents owners contract their games with the carnival operator 1 2 25 26 Carnival games of this type are mounted to towable trailers that enable the game to be moved from site to site However there are still some free standing game booths that are assembled on site These carnival games are usually set up in rows along the midway area along with the rides Types of carnival games editGames of chance edit nbsp The Duck Pond GameGames of chance are favorite carnival games A random outcome gives all players the chance of winning a prize An example of a carnival game of chance is the Dime Pitch game The objective is to toss a coin typically a dime or quarter onto a horizontal board that has random marks on it The marks on the board are the same diameter as the coin thrown By completely covering the mark on the board with the coin the player wins Another example of a game of chance is the Birthday game Players place their bets on a rail mounted strip that has months colors and holidays written on it Many players choose the month of their birth for their bet A random player is then selected to throw a large multisided die into a designated center area play area of the booth The die thrown has corresponding months colors and holidays written on the different sides The month color or holiday that shows on the top of the thrown die when it stops will indicate the winner In Pingpong Ball and Fish Bowl players throw pingpong balls at a table filled with rows of empty small fish bowls If the player gets a ball in the bowl they usually win a goldfish A game like Duck Pond which is geared for young children may offer a winner every time The player selects a rubber duck that is floating at random in water Writing on the bottom of the duck reveals the prize won source source source source source source source source A shooting gallery in Japan 2019Games of skill edit nbsp Shooting game at a mole festival in San Pedro Atocpan Mexico CityGames of skill are another favorite carnival game These games may test a players aim at hitting a target with either a ball or a weapon Some games of this type are the Cross Bow Shoot the Milk Bottle game or the Balloon and Dart game Other skill testing games challenge the physical abilities of the player One example of this type of game is the Rope Ladder Climb In this game the player must keep their balance while climbing an angled rope ladder that can pivot and invert the player The object of the game is to climb the ladder without falling off and ring a bell at the end of the climb Another game that tests the physical abilities of the player is Ring the Bell The player uses a large mallet to strike a pivot board on the game this causes an indicator to be driven vertically up an indicator scale board By hitting the pivot hard enough the indicator will ring a bell mounted at the top of the indicator scale board indicating a win Cover the spot is a game that involves covering a giant red spot with five smaller discs dropped by hand all red or color must be covered to win 3 Rigged carnival games edit nbsp The ball and bucket gameCarnival games are often viewed or portrayed as dishonest due to past history that may not necessarily apply to modern day games and operators The term mark meaning sucker originated with the carnival 4 When dishonest carnival game operators found someone who they could entice to keep playing their rigged slang term gaffed game 5 they would then mark the individual by patting their back with a hand that had chalk on it Other game operators would then look for these chalk marks and entice the individuals to also play their rigged game 4 Rigging a carnival game may be done in many different manners depending on the game For example the Ball and Basket game may be rigged by moving the A frame onto which the basket is mounted This would change the trajectory of the ball Another method has the operator leaving a ball in the basket for the demonstration which absorbs the energy of the tossed ball enabling the ball to stay in the basket and then remove it when the mark plays which makes the ball much more susceptible to bouncing out In a game like Ring Toss the blocks that the prizes are attached to are cut in such a way as to ensure the ring will not fit The Balloon and Dart game can be rigged by underinflating the balloons or by using dull point darts Some games may be rigged to play honestly or dishonestly and can be switched by the game operator The Milk Bottle game can be rigged this way On a rigged game one of the milk bottles is heavier than the others Depending on how the bottles are stacked will determine if the player will win 4 Some games are simply impossible to win One such game is the Push em Up or Stand the Bottle 6 game which requires the player to stand up a bottle with a 2 tine plastic fork was featured in episode 5 of Penn amp Teller Tell a Lie The bottles used in the game are weighted on one side which makes it impossible to stand the bottles upright without tipping them over when the heavier side is rotated to the top The Bottle Up often confused with this game is simply a skill game where the player uses a fishing pole with a ring attached to the end of the string to stand up the bottle By rigging the game the game operators can vastly increase the money they take in In many areas local law enforcement will test the carnival games prior to and during the carnival to help eliminate rigged games 7 However there are still some dishonest game operators One method they use to avoid law enforcement is to give legitimate instruments or make the carnival game fair and square during testing but rig it for other people 4 8 Racist carnival games in the U S editIn the United States there was a longtime tradition of carnival games the point of which was to hurt dehumanize or denigrate Black people Such games included African dodger or bean em where a Black person would stick their head through a curtain to be pelted with beanbags eggs or baseballs or dunk tanks that would drop a Black person into a tank of water if fairgoers hit a target with a ball In her 2020 book Caste Isabel Wilkerson describes these games as part of a culture of cruelty that made violence and mockery seem mundane and amusing teaching and reinforcing the U S racial caste system through entertainment 9 Carnival game photos edit nbsp Whack A Mole game nbsp Skee Ball game nbsp Weight Guessing Booth nbsp Pingpong Ball and Fishbowl game nbsp I Got It game variant of fascination nbsp Water Gun game nbsp Miniature rifle range nbsp Cover the SpotList of carnival games editAfrican dodger Ball and Bucket Toss Balloon And Dart Basketball Big Six wheel Bingo Birthday Bottle Stand Bottle Roll 2 39 Bulldozer Cat Rack 2 38 Coconut shy Cover the spot Crazy Bike Cross Bow Target Shoot Darts Dime Pitch 2 39 Duck Pond Dunk tank Fishing High striker or Ring the Bell Horse Race I Got It Kissing booth Ladder Climb Milk Bottle Pingpong Ball and Fishbowl Plate Break Ring toss Shoot the Freak Shooting Gallery Skee Ball Tin can alley Water Gun Weight Guessing Booth Whac A Mole Wheel of Fortune 2 39 Wire loop gameSee also editArcade game Traveling carnival Game classification Game of skill Redemption game Confidence Trick Confidence Man disambiguation References edit Carneytown Planning Ride Company and Vendors Archived 2009 01 22 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e Nickell Joe 2005 Secrets of the sideshows Lexington Ky University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 7179 2 OCLC 65377460 The Cover the Spot carnival game Retrieved 2016 05 25 a b c d Chicanery On The Midway PAC C org Professionals Against Confidence Crime Deputy Marshal Dave Goldenberg s article 2001 Unbalanced Reel Gaming Machines Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Tim Falkiner amp Roger Horbay s Abstract September 9 2006 page 4 The Gaffed Milk Bottle Game src https secure gravatar com avatar 13e2d53b8dc2052e7e90a51559413ddc s 96 lt img class avatar alt Marissa Laliberte 038 d mm Laliberte 038 r g width 50 height 50 gt Marissa Your Favorite Carnival Games Are Rigged Here s How Reader s Digest Retrieved 2023 09 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Police officer magician shows kids tricks of carnival games Teresa Stepzinski The Times Union Brunswick News March 28 2002 How to beat carnival games Archived 2007 05 12 at the Wayback Machine essortment article by Pagewise 2002 Wilkerson Isabel 2020 Caste the origins of our discontents First ed New York p 149 ISBN 978 0 593 23025 1 OCLC 1147928120 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link External links edit 1 A website that explains how a few carnival games are designed and how they can be won Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carnival game amp oldid 1207446891, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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