Solar Fire

A photo of the Solar Fire backglass as described in the post

Solar Fire, Williams, 1981. Yet another non-licensed property, the theme appears to be something space related. The background is a red and yellow sun, its surface whorling. Complex looking space ships of two types face odd in the foreground. The solar fire title is a mirrored surface.

It’s not a great game, to be honest, but there are certainly worse.

Seawitch

A photo of the Seawitch backglass as described in the post

Once again the universe tries to convince me being a witch is the way to go. Seawitch by Stern, 1980.

Two women in skimpy bikinis made of way too much gold ride barracuda-like sea monsters. One carries a bow and the other a pike. A giant human skull cave is in the top right. An assortment of mermaids and skulls adorn the left.

Quicksilver

A photo of the Quicksilver backglass as described in the post.

Quicksilver, Stern, 1980.

Ah yes, here we go back to the “was the artist on coke?” era.

A woman with an extremely extended (squid-like) cranium, dressed in an orange jumpsuit that matches her orange skin tone, runs through a very large pile of animated-looking green blobs. Some basketball-sized pinballs appear to be caught in the blobs. The blobs appear to be trying to capture the woman.

Behind them all, the game title displays in illustration-style neon lighting.

The drugs must have been really good back then.

Night Moves

Photo of the Night Moves playfield since it doesn't have backglass

Night Moves, International, 1989. This damn thing is a cocktail table pin and is designed to play sitting down but is uncomfortable no matter how you try to play it. It’s a back-killer. And it has no backglass.

A little Art Deco? But with zebra stripes? And TBH this is the first time I’ve really looked at the illustrations because I’m usually worried about hitting the lit things.