claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.012
1962 Williams Vagabond featured first direct-hit disappearing drop target in pinball history.
Vagabond was designed by Steve Cordak
high confidence · Direct statement in opening of video segment
Only 600 units of Vagabond were produced
high confidence · Explicitly stated early in presentation
Vagabond (1962) was the very first game with a directly-hittable disappearing drop target
high confidence · Host emphasizes this as 'most historically significant' feature; contrasts with earlier Gottlieb implementation
Gottlieb released Minstrel Man and Wild West in 1951 with drop targets that appeared behind stationary targets
medium confidence · Host states this as historical context, but no independent verification provided in content
Vagabond is an add-a-ball game where hitting the lit target awards an extra ball
high confidence · Host demonstrates and explains gameplay mechanic directly
The name 'Vagabond' refers to a hobo, similar to Leon Livingston 'the Rambler'
medium confidence · Host provides historical context but doesn't cite sources for this connection
“This game is most historically significant because it is the very first game with a disappearing drop target.”
Past Times Arcade Host @ ~0:20 — Core historical claim establishing Vagabond's place in pinball history
“In 1951, Gottlieb released two games: Minstrel Man and Wild West that had a drop target also. However, that drop target appeared behind a stationary target, so you'd hit the stationary target and it would drop behind it, more so like an animation. Whereas this is the very first target that you actually hit directly.”
Past Times Arcade Host @ ~0:35 — Detailed explanation of the technical distinction that makes Vagabond historically significant
“Your goal is to increase or advance the steps until you have this lit, and this is an add-a-ball game.”
Past Times Arcade Host @ ~1:00 — Explains core gameplay objective and machine type
historical_signal: Detailed historical documentation of significant mechanical innovation (first direct-hit drop target) in early 1960s pinball design
high · Host explicitly identifies Vagabond as 'most historically significant' for this feature and contrasts it with earlier Gottlieb implementations
neutral(0.5)— Content is educational and informational in tone; host presents historical facts with mild enthusiasm about the machine's significance; no critical stance or strong emotional valence
youtube_auto_sub · $0.000