For years, Zaccaria was the "what if" of the pinball world. An Italian manufacturer active primarily in the 1970s and 80s, they were the third-largest pinball company in the world, yet their tables were a rare sight in American arcades. Thanks to the digital realm, specifically the simulation Zaccaria Pinball developed by Magic Pixel, these obscure electro-mechanical relics have not only been preserved—they’ve been reborn.
It is a love letter to the underdogs of arcade history. It celebrates the weird seams, the slightly-off artwork, and the unique "Italian touch" that made these machines cult classics. Zaccaria Pinball
Look at The backglass features a Victorian gentleman floating in a cosmic vortex. The playfield is a neon explosion of roman numerals and geometric patterns. Or take "Spooky," which features a cartoon ghost that looks like it belongs in a 1980s Italian horror comic. The art style isn’t gritty realism; it’s psychedelic, abstract, and utterly charming. It feels like sitting inside a retro-futurist poster from 1984. More Than Just "Old Tables" One of the biggest misconceptions is that Zaccaria Pinball is just a dusty museum. It is not. For years, Zaccaria was the "what if" of the pinball world
When pinball fans talk about the golden age, the conversation usually starts and ends with Williams and Bally. And for good reason—those tables are legendary. But if you dig a little deeper, just beneath the surface of that mainstream nostalgia, you’ll find something wonderfully weird, wildly colorful, and distinctly European: Zaccaria Pinball . It is a love letter to the underdogs of arcade history