Does pinball licencing work?

Well it didn't exactly hurt The Addams Family

The pinball landscape is dominated by new machines with licences. There’s the recent Sterns: AC/DC, Metallica, Star Trek, Mustang. All licenced. And Jersey Jack Pinball: Wizard of Oz. Licensed.

The story’s the same for games on the horizon. JJP’s The Hobbit: Licenced. Dutch Pinball’s The Big Lebowski. Licenced.  Homepin’s Thunderbirds. All licenced.

SONY DSC

Heighway Pinball will be doing licenced and unlicenced titles

The only volume manufacturer with an original themed game that’s about to launch is Heighway Pinball with its Full Throttle motorbike game. But it turns out that Full Throttle is an exception: Heighway Pinball boss Andrew Heighway says it has five titles planned including Full Throttle, and only two of those will be original themes. The other three will be – you guessed it – licenced.

(There are some niche companies who have or are planning unlicensed games, of course, including Whizzbang Pinball’s deliciously naughty Whoa Nellie! Big Juicy Melons, Quetzal Pinball’s Captain Nemo, Spooky’s America’s Most Haunted, Multimorphic’s Lexy Lightspeed and a couple of others as well. JJP is also planning a Pat Lawlor game with an original theme.)

So here’s an interesting questions: What does a licence actually deliver?

You don't need a license if you have big juicy melons

You don’t need a licence if you have big juicy melons

“I believe that although original, unlicenced themes have a place in pinball’s future – and certainly our future – licenced games will always be the driving force for sales, as operators, collectors and the playing public can identify with licenced themes more easily,” says Andrew Heighway, the boss of Heighway Pinball.

Roger Sharpe, the ex-Williams licencing guru responsible for licencing many famous titles including The Addams Family, agrees that that’s what drives manufactures to buy licences.But he is not convinced that licencing is always the right way to go.

“I think the expectation by many of the players as well as the enthusiasts and collectors is that a licence is necessary,” he said in an interview in Issue 1 of Pinball Magazine. “I don’t believe that it is, but I understand the psychology of Stern Pinball, thinking that they need a licence all the time to break through the clutter of what else is out there.”

female model photo

Pinball needs to be out on location to attract new, young, enthusiasts

Before handing over the cash, manufacturers like Stern are certainly aware that a licence doesn’t guarantee that a game will be popular, or that lack of a licence means that it won’t. If you take a look at the Pinside Pinball Top 100 games list on any given week, about half (or maybe just under half) of the top 10 or top 20 games are  unlicenced and the other half are.

Now Pinside offers a measure of popularity with pinheads, but what about popularity with operators and other people responsible for putting pinball machines on location in pubs, barcades and other public places to attract the casual, impulse player?

To get a rough idea of what effect a licence has on a title’s popularity out on location, let’s take a look at some information from the early 1990s, when plenty of machines were being made, and almost all of them went out on location rather than into people’s homes.

Specifically, let’s take a look at Bally Williams games made in the period 1991-1993, and see how many of them were sold, where those figures are available.

(Those years were chosen because they were the last boom years for pinball, so the difference between licenced and unlicenced sales are more marked. It’s not the most rigorous or scientific of statistical analyses, but let’s see what we find anyway.)

 

pinball machine sales

What’s immediately obvious is that there were some extremely popular titles like T2, The Addams Family and Twilight Zone that were licenced, and some like The Getaway and Fish Tales that were not. There were also some dogs like Bugs Bunny and Gilligan’s Island that were licenced, and some like Black Rose that were not.

But what we really want to know is how much did the licence, rather than the game itself, effect sales? To get a better idea of that, let’s do a bit of a deeper dive into the numbers.

It turns out that during this period, 157,888 of these machines were sold. There were 16 separate titles, so on average, each title sold 9,868 units.

So how did having a licence, or not having one, effect these sales?

The answer turns out to be “not much.”

The average sales of unlicenced titles was 9,151, so about 7% down on the average for all machines. And licensed machines sold an average of 10,153, so just about 3% more than the average for all machines. (Those numbers look strange because there are many more licenced than unlicenced machines.)

Let’s take a look at that graphically:

share of pie

What this shows is that on average, licenced machines (red) got a slightly larger share of the sales pie than unlicenced machines (blue).

Now let’s get a bit less scientific for a moment.

Remember in the Olympics, how they take divers’ scores from the judges, and discount the highest and lowest to help eliminate ones that are way off kilter? Well in the same vein, The Addams Family is a real outlier, the best-selling game ever and one whose huge sales distorts the numbers considerably.

So what happens if we eliminate The Addams Family from our analysis?

For a start, the average sales per table drops from 9,868 to 9,108. We’d expect that, because the monster sales of The Addams Family have been excluded.

But something else rather strange happens. The average sales of unlicenced machines is actually higher than the overall average, at 9,151. And the average sales of licenced machines is lower than the overall average, at 9,042.

Let’s look at that again. Licencing actually seems to harm sales. Licenced titles sell less than unlicenced ones. That’s weird.

Graphically, the story now looks like this.Pie no TAF

What this shows is that licenced sales’ share of the pie (red) is just a fraction less than unlicenced sales (blue), on average.

So what should we make of all this?

There’s no doubt that the choice of time periods and titles to include and exclude are totally arbitrary, so this is hardly an authoritative study of the effects of licensing on sales in the early 1990s, let alone now. And Gary Stern, Jersey Jack and Andrew Heighway are no fools: they won’t spend money on licences for no benefit.

But it does provide food for thought. If nothing else it does suggest that smaller pinball companies that don’t have cash to splash on expensive licences aren’t always at a significant disadvantage.

Feature photo by Jellaluna
Beach girl photo by RaViCa

3 Comments on Does pinball licencing work?

  1. Good themes sell games. Good themes are often licenced!

  2. Good play sells games. Paying for a theme is crap.

  3. To say that it is just the theme or just the game play is overly simplistic. As consumers, we look for the entire package when we make luxury purchases. Form and function are equally important!

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.