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Pinball
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===Late 18th century: Spring launcher invented=== [[File:Early Pinball.jpg|thumb|''{{lang|fr|Billard japonais}}'', Alsace, France {{circa}} 1750β70. It already has a spring mechanism to propel the ball, 100 years before Montague Redgrave's patent.]] In France, during the long 1643β1715 reign of [[Louis XIV of France|Louis XIV]], billiard tables were narrowed, with wooden pins or skittles at one end of the table, and players would shoot balls with a stick or cue from the other end, in a game inspired as much by [[bowling]] as billiards. Pins took too long to reset when knocked down, so they were eventually fixed to the table, and holes in the table's bed became the targets. Players could ricochet balls off the pins to achieve the more challenging scorable holes. A standardized version of the game eventually became known as [[bagatelle]]. Somewhere between the 1750s and 1770s, the bagatelle variant ''{{lang|fr|Billard japonais}}'', or Japanese billiards in English, was invented in Western Europe, despite its name.{{clarification needed|date=January 2025}} Also called ''[[Stosspudel]]'', it used thin metal pins and replaced the cue at the player's end of the table with a coiled spring and a plunger. The player shot balls up the inclined playfield toward the scoring targets using this plunger, a device that remains in use in pinball to this day, and the game was also directly ancestral to [[pachinko]].{{citation needed|date=October 2016}}
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