Call it pinball for peace.
The Pinball Hall of Fame in Las Vegas, Nevada offers a step back in gametime amid the high-priced neon glitz and schlock of Sin City — and does it all for good causes.
"We're a bunch of old hippies who are busted and just like to hang out and play pinball and raise money," the Hall of Fame's Tim Arnold told Fox News Digital. His title is "director of stuff and things."
The organization donated $1.2 million to local causes last year, most of it to the Salvation Army, he said.
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The Pinball Hall of Fame is Arnold's 25,000-square foot arcade with 700 classic pinball machines, some dating back to the 1950s.
It’s free to enter, open to families — and games cost just 25 cents to 50 cents to play. The non-profit is staffed by volunteers.
"It’s a lot of fun for not a lot of money," Las Vegas resident Dianne Gilmore Schippert told Fox News Digital.
She called it "back to old school" family entertainment.
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"The Pinball Hall of Fame is an attempt by the members of the Las Vegas Pinball Collectors Club to house and display the world's largest pinball collection, open to the public," claims its website.
The charitable mission does not prevent the Pinball Hall of Fame from flaunting the same promotional bravado of any other local attraction.
It’s located on Las Vegas Boulevard – "The Strip" – between the city’s landmark "Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas" sign and the sprawling Mandalay Bay resort.
The arcade announces itself with 60-foot-tall letters on the façade screaming "PINBALL."
"We put up that sign so that the Martians could find us," said Arnold. "But so far only pinball players have found us."
A roadside retro neon sign points the way back to gaming history.
Pinball exploded onto the American entertainment scene during the Great Depression and reached its heyday in the 1970s, before electronic video games grew in popularity.
Licensing deals with movies and bands have inspired a rebirth in pinball in recent years, said national pinball expert and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania restaurant owner Steve Zumoff.
"Video games have patterns," he told Fox News Digital. "Pinball games are mechanical. Every game is different. Even the same game plays differently for different people."
The noise, the flashing lights and the ability to control the game give pinball eternal appeal, said Zumoff.
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Tiki Lounge, his Polynesian-themed Pittsburgh place, offers Metallica and Godzilla pinball games.
The sudden soaring of pinball's popularity in the 1930s raised the ire of public officials, who saw it as a form of gambling and a gateway game to deepening vice.
Pinball operators were "slimy crews of tinhorns, well-dressed and living in luxury on penny thievery," New York City Mayor Fiorello La Guardia raged, according to Smithsonian Magazine.
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"By the late 1930s, La Guardia had enough," the magazine added.
"He began commanding the police to seize pinball machines, smash them to pieces and dump them in the Hudson River, eventually destroying fully 11,000."
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