Other Manufacturers
Other known manufacturers of wall games include:
Amutronics, better known only for the TV Ping Pong B&W video game
Astrotronics, Inc., which manufactured a two-piece dart game, and promised golf, bowling, basketball and skeet shooting "frame games" in the future
Atari, the arcade video game, then home computer, manufacturer
Bally Manufacturing Corporation, the pinball and slot machine manufacturer
Casey's Electronics Inc., a manufacturer of bingo-style pinball conversion kits located around Pittsburg, which produced a unique two-piece Black Jack wall game.
Century Industries, of Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, which produced two baseball wall games
Chicago Coin, the pinball and arcade game manufacturer
Computer Logic, Inc., an obscure company from Livonia, Michigan
Digital Systems Corporation of Moorestown, New Jersey, which manufactured a duck hunting game
Hal Computer Inc., also known as Halgame, which produced a two-piece dart wall game and a two-piece golf wall game
Intrigue, a Holland and Belgium-based company, which may have produced the games distributed by Computer Logic - a master game with interchangeable screens offering pistol shooting, basketball, archery, horseshoes, golf, darts, auto racing, hockey, submarine battles, and skeet shooting
Northco Industries, Inc. of Pen Argyl, Pennsylvania, which distributed a duck hunting game identical to that of Vulcan
Nu-Game Conversion Systems, manufacturer of kits to convert Electro-Dart games to a basketball or football game
Rowe International, Inc., the jukebox and change machine manufacturer
Swiss Controls & Research, a division of Meridian Industries, Inc., Michigan City, Indiana, which manufactured a two-player baseball game
Vulcan Amusement Imports, a division of Ebsco Industries, Inc. of Red Bank, New Jersey, which distributed a duck hunting game identical to that of Northco Industries, Inc.