Description of Commercial Arcade Games
Commercial arcade games in the most classic sense refer to coin-operated games played on coin-operated entertainment machines that are typically posted or installed in public spaces such as amusement arcades, as well as in public businesses like restaurants, diners, and bars. The earliest arcade games were electro-mechanical, as in the case of ​pinball machines and other games that used a combination of electrical and mechanical moving parts. Others are redemption games and merchandisers that you play to redeem or to purchase something. Perhaps the most popular form of arcade games are video games, which are also said to have ushered in the golden age for arcade entertainment, thanks to the emergence of game machines that featured more exciting game plays and more immersive graphics.
Steady innovations in the video game industry, however, have caused a decline in the development of video games in their classic format — coin operated arcade units and cabinets — due in large part to the emergence of home video game machines and consoles. These new technologies not only provided a way for gamers to play at home but also lured users in with much richer gaming experiences and more sophisticated game mechanics, lore, and back stories or even sagas.