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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bally-midway-logos_1057.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Originally an American distributor, the company later produced games that served as rivals to the major [[Creator/{{Sega}} Japanese]] [[Creator/{{Namco}} arcade]] [[Creator/{{Capcom}} game]] [[Creator/{{Konami}} companies]].]]
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4Midway Manufacturing, later Bally/Midway, and eventually '''Midway Games''' was an American company formerly known for being a major UsefulNotes/ArcadeGame manufacturer, {{Pinball}} creator, and VideoGame publisher and developer.
5
6The oldest predecessor of the company was Bally Manufacturing, founded in 1932 by Raymond Moloney in Chicago as a subsidiary of Lion Manufacturing. The runaway success of Creator/{{Gottlieb}}'s ''Pinball/BaffleBall'' prompted Lion to [[FollowTheLeader get into the business]], and Bally was named after their first [[PhysicalPinballTables pinball table]], ''Ballyhoo''. The company also had success in making [[UsefulNotes/ArcadeGame mechanical arcade games]], vending machines, and eventually slot machines They even operated their own record label for a while in the mid-1950s to latch onto the burgeoning jukebox industry.
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8Founded in 1958, Midway Manufacturing Co. began as a manufacturer of amusement equipment, such as pinball tables, shooting games, and puck games. Like Bally, it was also based in the Chicago area (as were most major pinball manufacturers of the time).
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10Bally, meanwhile, dominated the industry in the Fifties and Sixties; by the end of the decade, after cornering the worldwide slot machine market, Bally became a publicly traded company and acquired Midway Manufacturing in 1969. The amusement games segments were combined as Bally/Midway, while Bally Manufacturing proper focused on slot machines and even got into casino ownership when gambling was legalized in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
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12As Bally/Midway, the amusement machine division continued to prosper in mechanical arcade games and pinball, and expanded into the new field of arcade video games. Through the Seventies, they formed a close alliance with Creator/{{Taito}}, and the two companies regularly licensed their games to each other. Bally/Midway also released the Bally Astrocade in 1977, an early home video game system.
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14Bally/Midway's big video game success came in 1978 with the popularity of Taito's ''VideoGame/SpaceInvaders''; they followed that up by successfully distributing many of [[Creator/BandaiNamcoEntertainment Namco]]'s arcade games, such as ''VideoGame/{{Galaxian}}'', ''VideoGame/{{Galaga}}'' and ''VideoGame/PacMan'', the defining game of the era. Their biggest coup was taking a ''Pac-Man'' clone named ''Crazy Otto'' and giving it a graphical conversion to create ''VideoGame/MsPacMan''. For nearly a decade, Bally/Midway was the leading producer of arcade video games in the United States. They were also the second-most prolific producer of pinball machines, surpassed only by Creator/WilliamsElectronics.
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16The success of ''Ms. Pac-Man'', which Bally/Midway had released while waiting for Namco to finish its official sequel ''Super Pac-Man'', led Namco to add ''Ms. Pac-Man'' to their line-up of official ''Pac-Man'' games. Bally/Midway would take advantage of that success by creating more of their own ''Pac-Man'' sequels, none of which enjoyed the success of ''Ms. Pac-Man''. Namco later ended their relationship with Bally/Midway and worked with [[Creator/{{Atari}} Atari Games]] (which they had come to partly own in 1984) and later established their own brand presence in the North American market. This led to a persistent urban legend that Namco dropped Bally/Midway because the Pac-sequels were unauthorized, but this was debunked around the time of the franchise's 40th anniversary.
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18With the decline of arcade gaming in the mid-80s, Bally Manufacturing sold Bally/Midway to Williams, which also had their own video game unit with big hits like ''VideoGame/{{Defender}}'' and ''VideoGame/{{Joust}}'' under their wing, in 1988. For a decade, the Williams/Bally/Midway group, renamed WMS Industies after their stock ticker symbol, continued to manufacture pinball machines under the Williams and Bally labels and video games under the Midway brand.[[note]]Bally Manufacturing continued to own the slot machine business and casinos, along with a chain of health clubs which was bought in 1983 but spun off in 1991 (and closed for good in 2016). The even owned Ride/SixFlags for a time in the early 80s. The company spun off the casino equipment division in 1993, which was bought by another slot maker in 1996, which continued to use the Bally name as a brand until it took the name Bally Technologies in 2006. Meanwhile, the original company, now called Bally Entertainment as it was just a casino owner, not a manufacturer, merged with Hilton's casino division, also in 1996. Hilton spun off that division as Park Place Entertainment (named for the address of the first Bally's casino in Atlantic City), which in turn became Caesars Entertainment through a series of mergers and acquisitions. That company sold the Bally's name and the original AC casino, to Twin Rivers Casinos in 2020, which renamed itself Bally's Corporation, including renaming all their casinos to use the name. Then they licensed the name to Sinclair Media when that company bought the former Creator/{{Fox}} Sports regional networks from Disney and renamed them Bally Sports as a tie-in to the lucrative sports betting market...only for the acquisition to prove to be [[DidntThinkThisThrough too much of a burden for Sinclair amid the collapse of the RSN market]]; as of this writing several teams have fled the failing Bally Sports networks in several regions, including Arizona and Houston, with the MLB even drawing up contingency plans in case Bally's parent Diamond Sports (a joint venture between Sinclair and Byron Allen) collapsed completely[[/note]]
19
20In the early 90s, Midway had a string of major arcade hits, lead by two types of games in particular: Fighting games which used arcades' more advanced hardware to make photorealistic (and over-the-top violent) graphics like Franchise/MortalKombat (one of the defining hits of the decade) and VideoGame/WarGods, and in-your-face arcade-style sports games like VideoGame/NBAJam and VideoGame/NFLBlitz. Meanwhile, parent WMS Industries followed Bally into the casino equipment business, while still maintaining the pinball business.
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22Up until the mid-90s, they avoided directly publishing in the home market, instead licensing their games out to other companies to port; most notably there was a deal with Creator/{{Acclaim}} that gave Acclaim right-of-first-refusal on porting Midway titles. This changed in 1994 when WMS Industries bought Tradewest (which was breifly renamed Williams Entertainment before becoming Midway Home Entertainment) to serve as their own home console publisher. WMS also acquired Atari Games Corp. (the original Atari's arcade division) from Warner Bros. (which had reassumed control) in 1996.
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24In 1998, WMS's success in casino equipment eventually prompted them to spin-off the video game division as Midway Games, with Midway also getting the Williams video game library, while the Bally/Midway pinball copyrights stayed with WMS. WMS shut down the Williams pinball division a year later to focus on the casino business.[[note]]WMS was bought by fellow casino equipment maker Scientific Games, which itself was originally a spinoff of Bally Manufacturing, in 2013. Scientific Games also bought Bally Technologies a year later. Now called Light & Wonder, the company continues to use both brands. Something ironic about both names winding up together again.[[/note]]
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26Unfortunately, the TurnOfTheMillennium also brought bad business policies. Midway exited the arcade industry in 2001 in an effort to return to profitability (a group of departed employees led by ''VideoGame/{{Cruisn}}'' series creator Creator/EugeneJarvis would form a new company, Raw Thrills, as a SpiritualSuccessor to the arcade unit) and two years later shut down their Bay Area studio, Midway Games West – the former Atari Games – effectively killing the last remaining remnant of the original Atari. They also began expensive buyouts of independent game developers to expand their market share. None of these moves helped Midway in any way, and the only way Midway could operate at accelerated losses was through debt offerings that came at the expense of their stock price.
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28[[ForegoneConclusion You can imagine how well that went]]. In November 2008, Midway was expelled from the New York Stock Exchange after their stock price fell below $1, leaving them flat-out broke. Despite the generally favorable critical and commercial reception towards ''VideoGame/MortalKombatVsDCUniverse'', it wound up being their final in-house title (''Wheelman'', the last video game Midway had any involvement in, was published in North America by Creator/{{Ubisoft}}).
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30In February 2009, Midway Games filed for bankruptcy. Their studios in UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}}, Seattle and San Diego were the only three not to get shut down. The former two, along with most of the Midway back catalog (save for the licensed sports titles – for obvious reasons
31– and the ''Cruis'n'' series of racing games, which is owned by Creator/{{Nintendo}})[[note]]The first five titles were either developed or published by Midway in conjunction with Nintendo; the most recent game, ''Cruis'n Blast'', was a Nintendo co-production with Raw Thrills.[[/note]], were bought by Creator/WarnerBros, with the Chicago studio rebranded as Creator/NetherrealmStudios and the Seattle studio merged into Creator/MonolithProductions, both in 2010. The San Diego studio, which came from the Tradewest purchase, was bought by Creator/{{THQ}} and rebranded THQ Digital Studio San Diego; it ultimately closed down in 2011 due to THQ's own troubles.
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33----
34!!Some of the pinball machines manufactured by Bally (pre-Williams acquisition):
35[[index]]
36* ''Pinball/BabyPacMan''
37* ''[[Pinball/CaptainFantastic Captain Fantastic and The Brown Dirt Cowboy]]''
38* ''Pinball/{{Centaur}}''
39* ''Pinball/DungeonsAndDragons1987''
40* ''Pinball/EightBall'' (second-most popular pinball machine of all time)
41** ''Eight Ball Deluxe''
42** ''Eight Ball Champ''
43* ''Pinball/{{Embryon}}''
44* ''Pinball/EvelKnievel''
45* ''Pinball/{{Fathom}}''
46* ''Pinball/{{Fireball}}''
47* ''Pinball/FlashGordon''
48* ''Pinball/FutureSpa''
49* ''Pinball/HarlemGlobetrottersOnTour''
50* ''[[Pinball/KissBally KISS]]''
51* ''Pinball/MataHari''
52* ''[[Pinball/MrAndMrsPacManPinball Mr. & Mrs. Pac-Man Pinball]]''
53* ''Pinball/{{Paragon}}''
54* ''[[Pinball/PlayboyBally Playboy]]''
55* ''Pinball/SilverballMania''
56* ''Pinball/TheSixMillionDollarMan''
57* ''Pinball/SpaceInvaders''
58* ''Pinball/{{Spectrum}}''
59* ''Pinball/SpyHunter''
60* ''[[Pinball/StarTrekBally Star Trek]]''
61* ''Pinball/StrangeScience''
62* ''[[Pinball/{{Wizard}} Wizard!]]''
63* ''Pinball/{{Xenon}}''
64
65!!Some of the video games developed or distributed by Bally/Midway (pre-1988)
66* ''VideoGame/TheAdventuresOfRobbyRoto''
67* ''VideoGame/AssaultRetribution''
68* ''VideoGame/BluePrint''
69* ''VideoGame/{{Bosconian}}'' (Originally made by Namco)
70* ''[[VideoGame/BumpNJump Bump 'n Jump]]'' (Originally made by Data East
71* ''VideoGame/BurgerTime'' (Originally made by Data East)
72* ''VideoGame/{{Gorf}}''
73* ''VideoGame/KickMan''
74* ''Videogame/KozmikKroozr''
75* ''Ms. VideoGame/PacMan''
76** ''Pac-Man Plus'' (a conversion of the original ''Pac-Man'')
77** ''Jr. Pac-Man''
78** ''Professor Pac-Man'' (a trivia game)
79* ''VideoGame/OmegaRace''
80* ''VideoGame/{{Rampage}}''
81* ''VideoGame/SolarFox''
82* ''VideoGame/SpyHunter''
83** ''VideoGame/SpyHunterII''
84** ''VideoGame/SpyHunter2001''
85** ''VideoGame/SpyHunter2''
86** ''VideoGame/SpyHunterNowhereToRun''
87* ''VideoGame/{{Tapper}}''
88* ''VideoGame/Terminator2JudgmentDay''
89* ''{{VideoGame/Timber}}''
90* ''{{VideoGame/TRON}}''
91** ''Discs of Tron''
92* ''VideoGame/{{Wacko}}''
93* ''VideoGame/WizardOfWor''
94* ''VideoGame/{{Xenophobe}}''
95
96!!Video games licensed, developed or published by Midway (post-1988)
97* ''VideoGame/TheAntBully''
98* ''VideoGame/AquaTeenHungerForceZombieNinjaProAm''
99* ''VideoGame/Area51FPS''
100** ''Blacksite: Area 51''
101* ''[[VideoGame/BioFreaks Bio F.R.E.A.K.S.]]''
102* ''VideoGame/CarnEvil''
103* ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot''
104* ''VideoGame/{{Cruisn}}'' series
105** ''Cruis'n USA''
106** ''Cruis'n World''
107** ''Cruis'n Exotica''
108** ''Cruis'n Velocity''
109** ''Cruis'n''[[note]]A Wii port of the Arcade tie-in game for ''Film/TheFastAndTheFurious'' but with the licensed material replaced with generic assets.[[/note]]
110* ''VideoGame/{{Defender}}'' (2003 reboot)
111* ''VideoGame/{{Doom}}'' ([=PlayStation=])
112** ''VideoGame/Doom64''
113* ''VideoGame/DrMuto''
114* ''VideoGame/FreakyFlyers''
115* ''[[VideoGame/{{Gauntlet}} Gauntlet Legends]]''
116* ''VideoGame/{{Gex}}: Enter the Gecko'' (PC)
117* ''VideoGame/TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy2006''
118* ''VideoGame/HourOfVictory''
119* ''VideoGame/HydroThunder''
120** ''Offroad Thunder''
121** ''4 Wheel Thunder''
122** ''Artic Thunder''
123* ''VideoGame/JackieChanStuntmaster''
124* ''VideoGame/KillerInstinct'' (arcade only)
125* ''[[VideoGame/MaceTheDarkAge Mace: The Dark Age]]''
126* ''Franchise/MortalKombat'' series
127** ''VideoGame/MortalKombat1992''
128** ''VideoGame/MortalKombatII''
129** ''VideoGame/MortalKombat3''
130** ''VideoGame/MortalKombat4''
131** ''VideoGame/MortalKombatDeadlyAlliance''
132** ''VideoGame/MortalKombatDeception''
133** ''VideoGame/MortalKombatArmageddon''
134** ''VideoGame/MortalKombatVsDCUniverse''
135** ''VideoGame/MortalKombatMythologiesSubZero''
136** ''VideoGame/MortalKombatSpecialForces''
137** ''VideoGame/MortalKombatShaolinMonks''
138* ''VideoGame/NBAJam''
139** ''VideoGame/NBABallers''
140* ''VideoGame/NFLBlitz''
141** ''[[VideoGame/BlitzTheLeague Blitz: The League]]''
142* ''VideoGame/PsiOpsTheMindgateConspiracy''
143* ''VideoGame/Ready2RumbleBoxing''
144* ''VideoGame/RevolutionX''
145* ''VideoGame/RiseAndFallCivilizationsAtWar''
146* ''VideoGame/SanFranciscoRush''
147** ''Rush 2: Extreme Racing''
148** ''San Francisco Rush 2049''
149** ''L.A. Rush''
150* ''VideoGame/ShadowHearts1''
151** ''VideoGame/ShadowHeartsCovenant''
152* ''VideoGame/SpyHunter''
153** ''VideoGame/SpyHunter1983''
154** ''Spy Hunter 2''
155** ''Spy Hunter: Nowhere to Run''
156* ''VideoGame/{{Stranglehold}}''
157* ''VideoGame/TheSuffering''
158** ''The Suffering: Ties That Binds''
159* ''TNA Impact''
160* ''VideoGame/TotalCarnage''
161* ''VideoGame/{{Trog}}''
162* ''VideoGame/UnrealChampionship2TheLiandriConflict''
163** ''VideoGame/UnrealTournamentIII''
164* ''VideoGame/WWFWrestleManiaTheArcadeGame''
165* ''VideoGame/WarGods''
166* ''VideoGame/WayneGretzkys3DHockey''
167[[/index]]

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