The games room specialist that developed a bitcoin-operated pool table has released its arcade machine equivalent.
Liberty Games, based in the UK, has developed a method of retrofitting arcade machines so that gamers can play with bitcoin rather than a bag full of metal coins.
The companyâs technical director Stuart Kerr said an arcade machine can be fitted with a Raspberry Pi, a simple credit-card sized computer, and other components so that gamers can send bitcoin to the machine ownerâs wallet. The method is similar to the one used by Liberty Games to outfit pool tables to accept bitcoin. Kerr said:
âWe love arcade machines at Liberty Games, weâve been selling them for over 10 years now ⦠[But] Iâm not sure if itâs just me, but I never have any coins on me, so the idea of an arcade machine that you can pay for in bitcoin seems like a really good idea!â
Kerr said the the companyâs arcade technicians worked alongside bitcoin-savvy employees to develop the machine. One machine has been fitted so far, but the firm has the ability to retrofit any of the coin-accepting arcade machines it sells, including the latest cabinets from publishers like SEGA or Namco.
Kerr said fitting an arcade machine with the bitcoin option would be a relatively cheap endeavour. An operator running its own web server (for the Raspberry Pi to communicate with the Bitcoin network) would pay less than £100. He added that it would cost slightly more if Liberty Games hosted the server.
The Liberty Games arcade machine thatâs currently modified to accept bitcoin is the Galaxy Cosmic II 60-in-1 model. The stand-up cabinet features two sets of joysticks with six illuminated buttons each.
The display is a 20-inch flat-screen â a departure from the bulky CRT monitors arcade machines originally sported. The Galaxy Cosmic II features 60 classic games from the golden age of the coin-op, from Atariâs Centipede to BurgerTime and Pac-Man and Nintendoâs Donkey Kong series. The cabinet costs £949. Kerr added:
âThereâs no doubt that the people who like to play arcade games, especially the retro ones, also love their tech.â
Though rescuing Princess Peach from the nefarious Donkey Kong with bitcoin may appeal, the bitcoin-accepting arcade machine is likely to remain a novelty product for some time. At least thatâs the opinion of Stephen Early, founder of Individual Pubs Ltd, which owns five pubs in the UK that accept bitcoin. Early noted that his pubs did not have any arcade machines in them.
âThe fact that an arcade machine supports payment by bitcoin and cash is not going to be a big deal, really. For example, we take bitcoin over the counter at our pubs, but itâs less than half a percentage point of our sales. So itâs not a big deal at the moment.â
Liberty Games previously released a bitcoin-accepted pool table that âattracted plenty of international interestâ. The firm has taken two orders on the tables, although it fielded inquiries from across the globe.
âWe thought we might have a few tech-savvy pubs in the UK interested, but in reality the interest has been much more far flung than that. Bitcoin fans in South America and Asia seem really keen on the idea,â Kerr said.
The firm is arranging to ship the tables, which can weigh up to 300kg, to international customers.
Liberty Games says it is the UKâs largest supplier or pool tables, arcade machines and football (or foosball) tables. It sells more than 2,000 pool tables annually, and more than 1,000 arcade machines annually. According to Kerr, about 90% of the firmâs business is in the UK.
View the machine in operation here.