Making 10,000 Yen/Day at Pachinko [Archive] - Japan Forum

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Pachipro
May 16, 2005, 07:04
I started playing Pachinko while in the military back in 1975. I never won more than the equivalent of 3 or 4,000 yen on the rare days that I did win. Back then yen was 300/US$1 so my winnings never totaled more than $10-$13. All the machines at that time were manual in that you had to shoot the balls by operating a lever with your thumb. 30 balls cost 100 yen. It was a little boring and I probably lost more than I won, but it was a good way to pass a rainy Saturday afternoon before hitting the bars in Yokohama at night.

I had only a rudimentary knowledge of Japanese at the time and didnft know that you could convert your winnings into cash, so I only took my winnings in the prizes or food and snacks that I would store in my room on the base.

I became an avid player in my college days beginning in 1977 when I discovered that you could get cash. I didnft win a lot. Some days I would lose 3 or 5,000 yen and on others I would profit 6 or 7,000 yen for a 2 or 3,000 yen investment. I didnft play but maybe 2-3 times/week and I usually won more than I lost as I learned how to greadh the machines by the openings of the pins and the speed of the balls. But being a poor student, I couldn't afford to spend more than a few thousand yen.

By 1980 all machines had been converted to automatic and instead of just tulips for the balls to fall into, the center piece had things like the wings of an airplane that would open once or twice when a ball fell into one of three holes. If a ball fell into a small hole in this center piece, a gbonush would be paid in that the wings would open 10 or 15 times in succession. For each ball that fell in 15 would come out. If this happened 5 or 6 times in a short period of time, you would win about 2,500-3,000 balls. This would be equal to about 6,000-7,000 yen in winnings. The machine would be closed and you either left with your winnings or continued playing on another machine. Also, it usually took anywhere from an hour or two, to five, six, or maybe even seven hours to gcloseh a machine if you were lucky enough to find a good machine.

If anyone knows anything about Pachinko it is this: YOU ALWAYS WIN ON THE FIRST FEW DAYS OF A PARLOR INSTALLING NEW MACHINES. The machines are loose and maybe 90% of the people win. After a couple of days things return to normal. About 2-3 times per year they will install new machines. Not all the machines are replaced. Maybe 20-50 or more depending on the size of the parlor, but itfs enough to fill the place with customers as all machines are loose.

This story goes back to January1981 when a new type of pachinko machine was first introduced called the gFeverh and gBravoh type. I was in my senior year at Sophia University (ã’q ‘åŠw). A contract I had teaching had just expired and I was in between jobs and wondering what I was going to do for money. Do I sign a new contract with them or maybe find something different closer to home or that paid more?

I had just gotten off the train about 5pm and was walking home when I heard the familiar music of a Pachinko parlor indicating that they had new machines. Back then they used to hire a group of musicians in traditional garb who played the flute, drums and a cymbal like instrument outside. Now they just have a bunch of huge flowers outside and include fliers in the newspapers. One can always tell when a place has new machines when you see 100 or so people lined up outside about 3 or 4pm on the first day and around noon on the second and third day.

Why not give it a shot I thought. It was free money and I could always use 4 or 5,000 yen. The place was already opened and I went in. Practically 75% of the machines had been replaced with a new type that I had never seen before. They were called gBravoh and gFeverh machines. Instead of the familiar wings of an airplane or something else in the center that would open when a ball went into a special slot, this was a new type that had looked like a slot machine in the center. The place was packed and, luckily I found an empty machine. I looked around and saw that a lot of people had large boxes of balls sitting on the floor. More than I had ever seen before. Wow I thought, this place is really loose.

I sat down and put in my usual 200 yen for 60 balls. This was pretty cool. When a ball went into a hole in the middle, the three sets of numbers would spin like a slot machine. The directions said that if the numbers stopped on g333h or g777h it would pay out a bonus 15 times. If it stopped on g337h or g773h a small bonus would be paid. I didnft understand this, but continued to play. I lost my 200 yen and put in more. This was really cool and was more interesting than the other types of machines. This was the birth of the digital pachinko machine.

After investing about 1,000 yen I hit g777h. Bells went off and the machine lit up like a Christmas tree. A small tray opened up on the bottom and balls flew in. For each ball that went in I received 15 bonus balls. Balls were coming out like crazy and I had a hard time scooping them into the small box fast enough. An attendant came over and gave me a big box that I knew held 2,500-3,000 balls. I thought I broke the machine or something as something like this had never happened before. After 10 balls went in, the tray would close and open again. 10 more balls and so on until it did it 15 times. All in all, the machine spit out about 3,000 balls as a jackpot. I had a huge box of balls that I knew was worth about 7,500 yen at 2.5 yen/ball.

To my surprise they didnft close the machine on me like they usually do when you win that many balls. Usually when you won about 2,500-3,000 balls they would close the machine and sell it for 500 yen later in the day. A closed machine indicated that the pins were pretty open. This was unbelievable! It used to take at least 3-5 hours or more with the other types of machines to win this many balls. And I did it in a matter of minutes!

I continued playing and within 20 minutes I hit g333h. Jackpot! Another 3,000 or so balls. The machine was closed, a cart was brought, and my 2 boxes of balls were wheeled to the counter. Wow! I knew I had about 15,000 yen here. I opted for cash and came out with about 14,000 yen in profit! Ifm going to try this again.

Back in I went, found another empty machine and within 2,000 yen I hit it again and about 45 minutes later I hit it again! Closed again and this time about 13,000 yen in winnings. This is unbelievable.

Back in I went. This time it took a little longer to hit the Jackpot. Maybe about an hour or more, but the funny thing was that I only put in 500 yen. Balls kept falling in the center slot like crazy as the pins to spin the numbers was quite open. For every ball that fell in, 15 more would come out. Honestly, the machine never stopped spinning. I closed that machine and took away another 14,000 or so yen in about 3 hours. I decided not to push my luck, but I sure as hell would be coming back tomorrow. All in all I profited that day over 40,000 yen. I never won more than 10-12,000 in a single day before, and that was extremely rare.

The next day I was there at the noon opening time. I spent about 4 hours there and profited over 20,000 yen. (I invested about 4,000 yen) I wouldfve stayed longer, but I had to get to classes at the university that night.

The next day I was there at noon and came away with another 20,000 or so in about 5 hours. Wow, this is unreal. Can these new machines be really that loose? Here I was after three days with about 80,000 yen in profit. About 2 1/2 times my rent and two-thirds of my monthly take home pay from teaching English.

Of course I was there the following day at the 10am opening. Now the honeymoon was over. Things should be back to normal. Within a couple of hours and 4,000 yen invested I closed another machine. I continued playing all day until about 5pm and came away with over 15,000 in profit. gMaybe one can really make a living out of this,h I thought. I heard about the so-called gPachiprosh who did nothing, but play pachinko all day, everyday. I thought it would be boring to play everyday, but this type of new machine was fun!

I continued going everyday (except Sunday as that was always the most crowded day) until I became a regular. Some days I stayed 12 hours, but mostly I stayed until about 6pm. Some days I did lose about 10-20,000 or more yen, but most days I profited a minimum of 10,000 yen and the really great days I came away with over 50,000 or more in winnings.

A couple of regulars taught me a few rules on how they profit. For example:

-Never lose more than 10-20,000 yen. Just walk away and come back tomorrow.

-Set a limit on winnings. Say 10–30,000 yen. When that is reached leave, no matter how early it is. More than likely youfll lose some of it back.

-If a machine is spinning well but not hitting the jackpot, take a break and go to lunch or something. They will hold the machine for 45 minutes. It might hit later as itfs controlled by computer.

As I also became a daily patron there I made a few friends. I was given the name gPachiproh by the regulars and welcomed into their group. There were about 15 regulars at that place who did nothing but play pachinko all day, everyday. No job, no nothing. Their only income was pachinko and Pachislo. I completely understood how that could be done as, for almost a year I never worked, ate out everyday, paid all my rent and bills and had money to burn at the bars at night with the income from Pachinko. And it was a helluva lot of fun too.

These days I only play Pachislo (The slot machines at pachinko parlors). The pachinko type machines have become really sophisticated and it is really hard to win if you donft invest 10–20,000 yen or more. You can lose that in 45 min. Of course you can win with less than that invested, but not often. They also tease you too much and instead of 15 balls coming from a spin, you only get 5-7 depending on the machine. But, when you win, you really win! Also, they donft close machines these days. Ifve seen people sitting at machines with 8, 9, 10 or more boxes! At about 4-5,000 yen/box, that is a lot of money. My best day was in about 1998 when I won 120,000 in 8 hours! The Pachislos are, in my opinion, a lot easier and I know that some Japanese would beg to differ. I guess it all depends on ones preference.

I never did go back to teaching English. I graduated from Sophia University in March, 1981 and since my visa didnft expire until December, I stayed and played pachinko everyday until I left for new horizons in New York that December.

With a degree in International Business and Economics and a fairly fluent knowledge of Japanese, I would knock them dead. Big salary here I come! The Japanese economy is booming, Japanese management style is becoming the rage and I have the keys to help bridge the gap between Japanese and American companies! NOT! But that is another storyc..

Dutch Baka
May 16, 2005, 07:31
Wow... Great to read this Pachipro!!!!! interresting a lott. but dangerous too!! as i have been hearing many times that pachinko can make you really addicted.. also i heard a story about a guy, who won a lot of money, but just kept on losing, and losing, he was in dept for around 7million yen with his wife, and his father in law... took years for him to pay that back, and he needed to go to a special group to talk about his addiction.

a couple of years ago i heard a story about the FRUIT machine, that some guys know the system of it so well, that they could make around 500.000 up to 1million yen a day from it... nice to do on a friday evening!!!!

i will give a try this summer maybe, but i worry about it a bit!!!!

but you are doing fine!!! do you still play this games ? can you play it in the states?


Greetings DB

Pachipro
May 17, 2005, 05:40
Yes, as with any form of gambling, pachinko can also become very addicting and one can lose all their money and then some. I have read stories recently about the increase of woman playing and becoming addicted to the game where they even leave their young children at home or in a car by themselves in order to play the game. Or of others who have lost so much money that they are in debt up to their eyeballs to loan sharks and loan stores that they just commit suicide.

They tease you so much these days by giving you two numbers, or pictures so often that you actually believe you will win within the next thousand yen or so. That's why it is so important to set a limit on how much you will spend.


do you still play this games ? can you play it in the states?
Yes, I still play whenever I visit and no, they do not have pachinko here in the states.

Dutch Baka
May 17, 2005, 06:24
its sad, people dont know when they should stop sometimes!!!

because of this, japanese goverment changed the law of it, by not getting money anymore, but gifts ( wich you can change around the corner)

this chang of law,, did it change that people play less pachinko?

i dont know so much about it, just read some story's

Pachipro
May 17, 2005, 07:01
because of this, japanese goverment changed the law of it, by not getting money anymore, but gifts ( wich you can change around the corner)
As far as I know the law hasn't changed at all and I was recently playing during my visit 3 months ago. You can still exchange your balls or coins at the counter for packets of flints or whatever and take them off premise and exchange them for cash. Or you can select gifts, food, or whatever right there.

Still seems strange to me in a country where gambling is supposidly forbidden. It must be due to the huge tax revenues brought into the government that they still allow it to go on.

Faustianideals
May 18, 2005, 12:13
Great story!

duff_o_josh
May 18, 2005, 14:36
do you know anything about medal games? can you cash them in for prizes and sell them later?

Kara_Nari
Sep 5, 2005, 22:54
So thats how you got your fantastic name!
I keep coming across Pachipros stories, and not yet has one bored me in the slightest way. Thanks! When you write your auto biography can I have a copy?

xerxes99
Sep 5, 2005, 23:10
They Don't have Pachinko here in the US, but you can buy the machines. My uncle had one, I used to sit and play it for hours whenever I visited him.

Pachipro
Sep 6, 2005, 03:38
do you know anything about medal games? can you cash them in for prizes and sell them later?
Sorry I didn't see this much earlier. By medal games are you talking about Pashislo (slot machines) that use coins or medals? If so, than they are cashed in the same as pachinko balls. You can either accept hard cash or you select items like CD players, food, cigarettes, etc.

When you write your auto biography can I have a copy?
If I ever do, you'll be among the first to receive one! :wave: :mail:

nice gaijin
Sep 6, 2005, 06:08
Really interesting read, Pachipro; I think you really captured the experience (except for the noise and smell of cigarette smoke x_X). My grandparents have one of those ancient machines that had a lever and the winged slots in the center, and if you hit the main jackpot slot a gate opens, and hitting the gate gives you the main prize; lots of bells ringing and such, but very rewarding.

When I walked by the pachinko parlors in my recent trip, the machines were worlds apart from what I grew up playing. I saw lcd displays and 3d graphics with stereo sound; it was drastically more advanced than the little ringing bells and gates I remember. I barely recognized what it was save for the roar of those little metal balls bouncing around.

Numark
Oct 5, 2005, 10:26
When I was in japan this summer I would go up and ask how many balls it took to get a square medal (or whatever thier cash-exchange prize was) and then how much the exchange was worth, so I knew how many I had to get. usually I would only put in 1000 yen, so I hardly ever won, and only did it maybe 4 times. But several of the places had exchange counters within the building! just up a stairway where the bathrooms were or something.