claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.019
Nick Baldridge details Gigi (1960s Gottlieb EM) gameplay mechanics and shares restoration challenges.
Gigi uses a manual lift trough system where the plunger lifts the ball to the shooter lane
high confidence · Nick Baldridge describing the trough mechanism of Gigi
The machine has 14 bumpers, with some combination of seven lit at any time; player must light all seven of one color (yellow or red) to achieve special
high confidence · Nick Baldridge explaining core gameplay objective of Gigi
Special can only be collected from side lanes, controlled by an alternating relay that switches sides based on target hits
high confidence · Nick Baldridge describing special collection mechanics
The match digit in EM games like Gigi is predictable and based on switch hits, not randomized, allowing skilled players to potentially game the system
high confidence · Nick Baldridge explaining EM match mechanics and player exploitation potential
Nick has two Gottlieb EM machines (wedgeheads) and both have coin circuit issues; Gigi's replay button no longer engages despite initial proper function
high confidence · Nick Baldridge describing persistent coin circuit problems across his Gottlieb collection
Gigi requires an unusually long shooter rod, forcing Nick to cut a barrel spring in half to achieve proper function
high confidence · Nick Baldridge describing shooter rod assembly challenge during restoration
The 2-for-1 coin unit on one of Nick's machines may be responsible for current play-start issues, but he has not yet disassembled it due to complexity of the step unit
medium confidence · Nick Baldridge speculating on coin unit as the remaining suspect for coin circuit malfunction
“I finished tweaking Gigi. I had her working uh... few days ago but uh... needed some adjustments here and there and a little bit of cleaning and a couple of relays I've got her working now and she plays pretty phenomenally well”
Nick Baldridge @ 0:00-0:30 — Opening statement establishing the episode focus on Gigi restoration and current operational status
“Your goal is to light either all seven yellow, or all seven red bumpers in order to achieve special.”
Nick Baldridge @ 1:30-2:00 — Core gameplay objective explanation that drives the entire Gigi experience
“This can be frustrating as three of the bumpers out of the fourteen are pops. And so if you make a mistimed shot and accidentally hit one of the pops, it's likely that it's...”
Nick Baldridge @ 4:00-4:30 — Identifies the difficulty spike when pop bumpers reset the lit bumper state, core gameplay challenge
“As this is an EM, the match digit is predictable. It's not randomized. It's based on the number of switch hits. So if I match on digit 9, I can play the game until I'm certain that my score matches and then intentionally lose the ball on the last ball in order to continue playing.”
Nick Baldridge @ 7:00-8:00 — Reveals exploitable mechanic in EM games that skilled players historically abused on location machines
“I seem to have or attract trouble with Gottlieb EM coin circuits. I have two wedgeheads now and each one has a different issue with the coin circuits.”
Nick Baldridge @ 8:30-9:00 — Identifies persistent pattern of coin circuit failures across Gottlieb EM machines in his collection
“The replay button on the front of the game will not engage. When I first got the machine, that worked fine. I did have to rewire the coin door... Now the game only starts on a coin drop which is kinda weird.”
Nick Baldridge @ 9:00-9:30 — Documents the specific coin circuit failure mode in Gigi that emerged after initial successful operation
“I had to cut an old barrel spring in half because Gigi apparently uses a really, really long shooter rod. I don't have another example of a 60's Gottlieb, you know, right here that I can check against.”
restoration_signal: Nick modified Gigi's shooter rod by cutting a barrel spring in half to accommodate the machine's unusually long rod, indicating non-standard mechanical requirements for 1960s Gottlieb machines
high · I had to cut an old barrel spring in half because Gigi apparently uses a really, really long shooter rod.
product_concern: Pattern of coin circuit failures across Nick's Gottlieb EM collection; Gigi specifically lost replay button functionality and now requires coin drop to start games
high · I seem to have or attract trouble with Gottlieb EM coin circuits. I have two wedgeheads now and each one has a different issue with the coin circuits.
gameplay_signal: Gigi's alternating relay system creates frustration mechanic where pop bumper hits unlit the target bumpers needed for special, forcing players to adapt mid-game strategy
high · This can be frustrating as three of the bumpers out of the fourteen are pops. And so if you make a mistimed shot and accidentally hit one of the pops, it's likely that it's [reset]
gameplay_signal: EM match digits are predictable and based on switch hits rather than randomized, allowing skilled players to intentionally manipulate final scores to earn replays, historically abused on location machines
high · As this is an EM, the match digit is predictable. It's not randomized. It's based on the number of switch hits.
restoration_signal: Nick rewired Gigi's coin door due to loose wires but issue persists; suspects 2-for-1 coin unit requiring disassembly but has not yet completed diagnosis
positive(0.75)— Nick expresses enthusiasm about Gigi's gameplay despite frustration with coin circuit issues. His tone is appreciative of the machine's challenge and design, with problems framed as restoration puzzles rather than fundamental flaws. Closing endorsement reinforces positive sentiment.
groq_whisper · $0.037
Nick Baldridge @ 13:00-13:30 — Reveals non-standard mechanical requirement for Gigi that necessitated creative restoration solution
“I'm really enjoying it and at the moment you know can't stop feeding it nickels or else I can't push the start button so if you come across one in your travels I highly suggest you give it a shot”
Nick Baldridge @ 14:00-14:30 — Personal endorsement of Gigi as a worthwhile EM experience despite its challenges
medium · I did have to rewire the coin door. There were a bunch of loose wires... The only thing I haven't done is disassembled the 2-for-1 coin unit and cleaned and checked gapping
content_signal: Episode 45 focuses on detailed gameplay walkthrough of specific EM machine with hands-on restoration anecdotes, providing educational content for EM pinball enthusiasts
high · I thought I'd go over what's involved in the gameplay when you start the game... I'm really enjoying it and at the moment you know can't stop feeding it nickels