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What is the doll picking machine called?

Apr. 29, 2024

Claw machine - Wikipedia

Type of arcade game

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"Claw game" redirects here. Not to be confused with Claw (video game)

A claw machine in Ustroń, Poland

A claw machine is a type of arcade game. Modern claw machines are upright cabinets with glass boxes that are lit from the inside and have a joystick-controlled claw at the top, which is coin-operated and positioned over a pile of prizes, dropped into the pile, and picked up to unload the prize or lack thereof into a chute.[1][2] They typically contain stuffed toys or other cheap prizes, and sometimes contain more expensive items like electronic devices and fashion accessories.[3][4] Claw machines are also known as skill cranes, claw cranes, and crane games, and are known as UFO catchers in Japan due to the claws' resemblance to UFOs.[5][6][7]

The earliest claw machines are believed to have been created in the late 19th century and inspired by the machines used to build the Panama Canal, while the first patented claw machine, the Erie Digger, was inspired by the creation of the Erie Canal and invented in 1926. It and its successor, the Miami Digger, were popular throughout the United States during the 1930s, specifically during the Great Depression, as carnival attractions and as furniture in public places. By the 1980s, claw machines were ubiquitous in both the United States and Japan; the success of Sega's UFO Catcher machines in the 1980s and 1990s inspired a claw machine craze in the latter country. Claw machines have made appearances in numerous video games, music videos, films, and television shows since at least the 1990s.

In the late 2010s, claw machines became immensely popular in South Korea and Taiwan as cheap entertainment due to their slowing economies at the time, with the number of claw machine arcades in both places rising into the thousands. Also in the 2010s, claw machines that could be remotely controlled via mobile applications or websites began turning up online.

Claw machines are often rigged to modify the claw's strength on each turn, and are consequently considered gambling devices in some jurisdictions.

Early history

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Illustration of an Erie Digger in a 1927 issue of The Billboard

Claw machines are believed to have originated in the United States in the 1890s, when they were made to resemble the machines that built the Panama Canal.[7] The first patented claw machine, the Erie Digger, was a glass box containing candy and other small objects, a chute, and a coin-operated miniature steam shovel that moved in an arc, could be moved with a handle, and could be lifted and dropped into the chute using a hand crank.[8] It was invented in 1926, manufactured by the Erie Manufacturing Company, and named after the construction of the Erie Canal. It found success at carnivals, partially because it did not require electricity like other carnival attractions. Throughout the 1930s, it saw use as furniture in train stations, hotels, drugstores, cigar stores, and bus stations, where it was used to keep customers entertained.[2] During the Great Depression, designing intricate, Art Deco claw machines for hotels and stores became a lucrative endeavor.[9]

The Miami Digger, invented by American carnival operator William Bartlett of Miami and patented by him in 1932, improved upon the design of the Erie Digger by using an electric motor and allowing the crane to move around the entire box.[9] It was also known as the Nickel Digger, as it contained money, such as nickels and silver dollars, as prizes; premium versions of the diggers had watches and cigarette lighters as prizes for adults. Bartlett became rich from the popularity of the machines and died in 1948.[2]

Global popularity

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In Asia

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A row of UFO catchers in Akihabara, Tokyo

Japanese companies Sega and Taito began designing trolley-style claw machines in the 1960s.[2] They gained popularity in Japan during the late 1970s, with crane games ranking among Japan's top ten highest-grossing electro-mechanical (EM) arcade games of 1977 and 1978.[10][11] Sega released their UFO Catcher claw machine in 1985 and made their first shipment of it in 1986.[12] It had sold 10,000 cabinets by 1991, its popularity inspiring Sega's creation of the Dream Catcher in 1989 and the New UFO Catcher in 1991 while making the UFO Catcher series responsible for 90 percent of stuffed toy claw machine sales.[13] By 1994, its claw could be changed to fit the sizes and shapes of different prizes, and it had become a craze across Japan: arcades started dedicating entire floors to UFO Catcher cabinets—of which Sega had sold over 40,000, making it Sega's best-selling game at the time—and the term "UFO catcher" became synonymous with crane games in Japan.[14][15][16]

Sega Shinjuku Kabukicho, a two-story Sega arcade in Shinjuku, Tokyo containing 477 claw machines, received the Guinness World Record for having the most claw machines in a single venue in 2021, a record previously held by the Taito Station in Fuchū, Tokyo for having 454 machines.[17] As of 2023 , Yuka Nakajima of Japan holds the Guinness World Record for being the most successful claw machine player due to winning more than 3,500 Rilakkuma teddy bears from claw machines.[18][19] In 2021, claw machines accounted for more than half of the revenue at Japanese arcades, according to the Japan Amusement Industry Association.[20] Japanese claw machines can also contain cakes as prizes.[21][22]

The number of claw machine arcades and the popularity of claw machines both experienced a sharp increase in South Korea in 2016 and 2017, specifically in Seoul neighborhoods with universities like Hongdae and Sinchon. From 2015 to 2017, the number of South Korean claw arcades increased from 20 to 1,900, while mentions of claw machines on Korean social networks also increased during that time. Korea JoongAng Daily and The Korea Herald attributed the increased interest to South Korea's harsh economy at the time leading to a desire for cheap entertainment, while U.S. News & World Report associated it with the country's increasing youth unemployment.[23][7][24]

A claw machine arcade in Hsinchu, Taiwan

In Taiwan, where claw machine arcades are usually open all day and owners sublet their machines to different operators, claw machines became especially popular as inexpensive entertainment starting in 2017, due to their costing NT$10 to use. The number of claw machine arcades in Taiwan increased from 920 in 2016 to 3,353 in 2018 and, as of 2019 , there are more than 10,000.[25] A 2018 survey of children aged seven to 18 reported 32.7 percent of them using claw machines one to three days a week and over four percent using them every day.[26] The Central Bank of the Republic of China increased their budget in 2019 to produce more NT$10 coins to accommodate the increasing popularity of claw machines in Taiwan. By 2018, the average monthly revenue for operating a claw machine was around NT$5,000.[4]

The largest claw machine arcade in China, LJJ Station in Beijing, has more than 60 machines with stuffed toy versions of characters from WeChat animations.[27] Before 2020, claw machines were popular in Thai shopping malls; a 2020 survey conducted by the advocacy group No Gambling Youth Club stated that 75 of the 92 shopping malls surveyed contained 1,300 claw machines collectively.[28][29]

United States

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In the United States, claw machines became ubiquitous in the 1980s.[2] They are common at carnivals, grocery stores, shopping malls, arcades, amusement parks, and bowling alleys.[30][31] The world's largest claw machine, according to Guinness World Records, is a 17 by 8 by 12 feet machine designed by the Dayton, Ohio-based creative agency Real Art and opened in 2014.[32]

There were many instances of children getting stuck inside of claw machines in the United States throughout the 2010s, including in Tennessee, New York, Kentucky, Nebraska, Pennsylvania,[32] North Carolina,[33] and Texas.[34]

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Online claw machines are claw machines controlled remotely online, with prizes that get shipped to users' homes upon being won.[35] Since the 2010s, mobile apps, such as Clawee in Israel and Sega Catcher Online in Japan, and websites, such as Netch in Japan and the Santa Claw in the United States, have allowed users to remotely use claw machines stored in warehouses in their respective countries.[36][37][6][38]

The 1993 Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) video game Kirby's Adventure includes a minigame based on the UFO Catcher, while the 1998 PlayStation game Bomberman World has a UFO catcher-themed battle stage.[15][39] Sega's 2005 video game Yakuza and its sequels Yakuza 0 and Yakuza Kiwami also feature UFO Catcher machines.[40][41][42] The 2019 video game Link's Awakening includes a claw machine as a side activity.[43] In the 1995 film Toy Story, Buzz Lightyear and Sheriff Woody climb into a claw vending machine filled with claw-worshipping aliens.[44] In the SpongeBob SquarePants episode "Skill Crane" from its fourth season, Squidward becomes addicted to trying to win a prize from a claw machine.[45] Claw machines have also been featured in the music videos for Delta Heavy's 2019 song "Take Me Home", Corpsegrinder's 2022 song "Bottom Dweller", and the City Girls' 2022 song "Good Love".[46][47][48]

Legality

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North America

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The passing of the Johnson Act by Congress in 1951, which prohibited the transfer of electronic gambling devices across state lines, led to Miami Diggers at carnivals being destroyed by operators or seized by government officials. Carnival owner Lee Moss organized other carnival owners together to protest against the classification of the diggers as gambling machines. Because of this, a compromise was soon reached that allowed carnival owners to keep the diggers but required them to be manually operated with no coin slot and prizes that were not money and worth one dollar or less, while the government would tax each machine US$10. Regulations loosened in 1973 due to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) abandoning the Johnson Act.[2] As of 2015 , state regulations generally require that claw machines contain less valuable prizes.[31] Most states exempt claw machines from their gambling laws.[49]

In New Jersey, claw machines are regulated by the Legalized Games of Chance Control Commission. In 2016, New Jersey Senator Nicholas Scutari proposed legislation that would add specifications to prevent claw machines from being unwinnable.[49] Some attorneys[where?] have advised claw machine owners to avoid using the word "skill" in the game description decal present on most machines.[50]

In other jurisdictions, such as Alberta, Canada, skill cranes are illegal unless the player is allowed to make repeated attempts (on a single credit) until he or she wins a prize.[51] Skill cranes in single-play mode (where the player has only one chance per credit to try for a prize) were found by the Ontario Court of Appeal to be essentially games of chance, and therefore prohibited except at fairs or exhibitions, where they are covered by an exemption.[52]

Asia

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Claw machines were outlawed in Thailand after being classified as gambling devices by the Supreme Court of Thailand in 2004, though, until 2019, laws prohibiting their use were rarely enforced.[28] In 2020, the Ministry of Interior in Thailand ordered a nationwide ban on claw machines after activists protested against their widespread availability.[29] However, the public prosecutor of Chiang Mai ruled in 2022 that claw machines were vending machines rather than gambling machines and were therefore legal.[53] South Korean law dictates that claw machines cannot carry prizes worth over ₩5,000 to prevent addiction. An investigation by South Korea's Game Rating and Administration Committee in 2017 found that the majority of claw machines they randomly inspected broke Korean law.[24] The Consumer Protection Committee of the Executive Yuan stated in 2019 that their investigation of claw machines in Taoyuan, New Taipei City, Kaohsiung, Taipei City, Tainan, and Taichung found that 70 percent of them contained illegal adult products such as vibrators and e-cigarettes.[54] In 2021, the Ministry of Home Affairs in Singapore proposed capping the value of prizes in claw machines at S$100 in order to, according to them, "address the inducement effect of high-value prizes, without increasing the regulatory burden on operators".[55] On March 2024, Brunei has banned claw machines as they have been deemed haram due to its gambling elements.[56]

Chances of winning

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A pair of E-Claw, claw machines created by Belgian manufacturer Elaut

Since the 1920s, advertising for claw machines has suggested that they are able to be won completely through strategy and skill. Claw machines can be set to give players a chance of winning during every paid turn if they use a "Play Till Win" setting.[3] Settings like claw strength—which is controlled by the amount of voltage sent to a claw—and "dropping skill"—the ability of a claw to drop a prize back into the machine after picking it up—are frequently modified by arcade owners to control the odds of a player winning and are often based on how much money the machine has earned.[31] Claw machine rigging has been reported in the United States, South Africa, South Korea, and Singapore.[30][3][24][57]

On social media platforms such as TikTok and YouTube, videos of people using claw machines and offering modifications for how to get prizes from them were popular in the 2010s and 2020s.[58][3] A 2015 report by Vox's Phil Edwards describing how claw machines were often rigged went viral online and became controversial among claw machine enthusiasts.[59] A 2016 report by Jeff Rossen for the American TV program Today showing the same thing prompted the American Amusement Machine Association, which represents arcade game manufacturers across the United States, to make their members sign a "Fair Play Pledge" in 2017 that required their machines to be winnable through skill alone.[60] The 2021 book How to Beat the Claw Machine: Tips and Tricks to Help You Win Big, written by American arcade owner Brian McKanna, offers tips on how to win prizes at claw machines, which he described as "absolutely rigged".[61]

According to a 2023 report by News24, most claw machines in South Africa are rigged to only allow players to win if the machine has earned a certain amount of money.[62] A manual for the Intelligrab operating system, made by Chinese manufacturer Elaut, encourages claw machine owners to create the illusion that the player has a chance of winning if they keep trying, and owners can adjust machines' claw strength per turn.[3]

References

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Arcade Experts Tell Us Why We Never Win Toys in Claw ...

In

In arcades , claw machines are crowd magnets. And understandably so. Most people have a soft spot for adorable plushies perched in well-lit boxes, just begging to be taken home — like this one kid who decided to crawl into a claw machine to take matters into his own hands. Many also love the thrill of knowing that the toy of their choice could fall into their hands (or out of it) with one skillful move. But whenever it seems like the prize is sitting precariously close to the chute — just one solid grab away from being yours forever — the claw drops the damn toy. This happens again and again, until you’re out of patience or out of coins, or both.

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How exactly do these insidious machines fuck with our deepest desires and sense of self-worth? I spoke with toy-catching experts and claw machine owners to find out. 

How exactly do these insidious machines fuck with our deepest desires and sense of self-worth? I spoke with toy-catching experts and claw machine owners to find out.

Here’s the big question: Are claw machines rigged?

“Hell yeah!” said Umehara Keiji, a Singapore-based content creator who documents his frequent trips to the arcade on his

“Hell yeah!” said Umehara Keiji, a Singapore-based content creator who documents his frequent trips to the arcade on his YouTube channel . “Claw machines are 100 percent rigged in the arcades.”

To be clear, we’re defining “rigged” as claw machines having certain features that make it intentionally harder for players to win.

To be clear, we’re defining “rigged” as claw machines having certain features that make it intentionally harder for players to win.

According to Umehara, who briefly owned a claw machine while collaborating on a project with a local arcade, the settings of most claw machines are “very very detailed.” 

According to Umehara, who briefly owned a claw machine while collaborating on a project with a local arcade, the settings of most claw machines are “very very detailed.”

“You can really configure everything to make it more enticing for people,” he said. 

“You can really configure everything to make it more enticing for people,” he said.

Photo: Koh Ewe

For example, owners can vary the claw strength for when the claw goes up, down, or back above the chute. This makes people feel like they’re on the verge of winning when the toy is close to the chute. But of course, the claw strength would be “crap at that moment,” Umehara said.

For example, owners can vary the claw strength for when the claw goes up, down, or back above the chute. This makes people feel like they’re on the verge of winning when the toy is close to the chute. But of course, the claw strength would be “crap at that moment,” Umehara said.

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“That is the dark truth about claw machines,” quipped Umehara, who also calls himself the Arcade Ninja.

“That is the dark truth about claw machines,” quipped Umehara, who also calls himself the Arcade Ninja.

Meanwhile, another Singapore-based toy catcher known as

Meanwhile, another Singapore-based toy catcher known as Claw Coach pointed out another insidious function of claw machines — predetermined win rates or “payouts.”

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“They are meant to be programmed such that the cost price of the prizes are fulfilled before issuing a payout,” he said. 

“They are meant to be programmed such that the cost price of the prizes are fulfilled before issuing a payout,” he said.

For example, if the prize costs $10 and the claw machine charges $1 per try, arcade owners can program the machine to pay out once every 15th try. This means that some lucky people would get to maneuver the claw during a payout round, when the claw strength is kept strong enough to drop the prize right into the chute.

For example, if the prize costs $10 and the claw machine charges $1 per try, arcade owners can program the machine to pay out once every 15th try. This means that some lucky people would get to maneuver the claw during a payout round, when the claw strength is kept strong enough to drop the prize right into the chute.

Rey Chua, an events manager at a Singapore-based claw machine rental company, told VICE that while there are different types of claw machines, they all pretty much work the same way. “Whereby the claw only [catches] tightly part of the time and not all the time,” he said.

Rey Chua, an events manager at a Singapore-based claw machine rental company, told VICE that while there are different types of claw machines, they all pretty much work the same way. “Whereby the claw only [catches] tightly part of the time and not all the time,” he said.

“There [is] some element of skill and luck involved,” Chua said, adding that the difficulty of winning a prize would depend on the requirements of their renters.

“There [is] some element of skill and luck involved,” Chua said, adding that the difficulty of winning a prize would depend on the requirements of their renters.

Photo: Carnival World

An events organizer at another claw machine rental company who goes by the name Jayden said that “the difficulty level [depends] on the prizes in the claw machines.” But he also noted that he “can’t reveal much” because he did not want to “spoil [his] rice bowl.”

An events organizer at another claw machine rental company who goes by the name Jayden said that “the difficulty level [depends] on the prizes in the claw machines.” But he also noted that he “can’t reveal much” because he did not want to “spoil [his] rice bowl.”

While the claw machine owners remain understandably tight-lipped, the instruction manuals of claw machines pretty much bare it all.

While the claw machine owners remain understandably tight-lipped, the instruction manuals of claw machines pretty much bare it all.

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For example, the one for

For example, the one for Telephone Crane , a phone booth-shaped claw machine, explains that the machine’s claw strength is determined by two potentiometers that can change the voltage level going to the claw coil. One of the potentiometers controls the claw strength as the claw retracts upwards to the carriage (usually after picking up a prize); the other controls the claw strength while it is traveling, with or without the prize, to the chute.

The variation in these two claw strength settings may explain why toys sometimes get picked up in a seemingly firm grip only to fall when it’s painfully close to the chute. This is also the reason people can’t stop playing.

The variation in these two claw strength settings may explain why toys sometimes get picked up in a seemingly firm grip only to fall when it’s painfully close to the chute. This is also the reason people can’t stop playing.

The fact that the machine “always seems to miss a little bit” when getting the prize “will trigger you to try your luck again and again,” said Jayden.

The fact that the machine “always seems to miss a little bit” when getting the prize “will trigger you to try your luck again and again,” said Jayden.

Photo: Koh Ewe

Different claw machines have different ways to vary claw strength. The one examined in a

Different claw machines have different ways to vary claw strength. The one examined in a 2015 Vox article has three types of claw strength settings, depending on the claw’s moving direction. The machine owner can also decide on their “profit rate,” which in turn determines the frequency of the claw grabbing prizes at full strength, allowing players to win easily.

Then, the question may really be about which claw machines are more rigged (have a lower payout rate) than others. But the answer isn’t quite so straightforward.

Then, the question may really be about which claw machines are more rigged (have a lower payout rate) than others. But the answer isn’t quite so straightforward.

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“The characteristics of claw machines differ from brand to brand, arcade to arcade. And even within the same arcade, there can be similar looking machines with different settings,” said Claw Coach. 

“The characteristics of claw machines differ from brand to brand, arcade to arcade. And even within the same arcade, there can be similar looking machines with different settings,” said Claw Coach.

The settings that differentiate claw machines can range from predetermined payout rates to claw strength, claw release characteristics, and claw movement speed.

The settings that differentiate claw machines can range from predetermined payout rates to claw strength, claw release characteristics, and claw movement speed.

Where you play matters too. According to Umehara, his win rate is significantly higher in Japanese arcades compared to Singaporean ones. In Japan, “they kind of want you to win,” he said, pointing to an “environment” where machine owners are happy for customers to succeed. He said that arcades in Singapore, on the other hand, are “a bit more money-minded.”

Where you play matters too. According to Umehara, his win rate is significantly higher in Japanese arcades compared to Singaporean ones. In Japan, “they kind of want you to win,” he said, pointing to an “environment” where machine owners are happy for customers to succeed. He said that arcades in Singapore, on the other hand, are “a bit more money-minded.”

Some arcade enthusiasts also told us that claw machines with big-ticket items, like iPhones or Nintendo Switches, are usually much harder to win. 

Some arcade enthusiasts also told us that claw machines with big-ticket items, like iPhones or Nintendo Switches, are usually much harder to win.

“You've got a better chance at winning a stuffed bear than an Xbox,” said Erik Kane, an American YouTuber who runs the channel

“You've got a better chance at winning a stuffed bear than an Xbox,” said Erik Kane, an American YouTuber who runs the channel Arcade Warrior

But how do you beat a claw machine?

So now you know how claw machines work. But that probably won’t stop you from taking a shot at the next flashy toy catcher you see. If you’re going to play, how can you maximize your chances of winning?

So now you know how claw machines work. But that probably won’t stop you from taking a shot at the next flashy toy catcher you see. If you’re going to play, how can you maximize your chances of winning?

Claw Coach talked about the handy “double-tap” technique that most people don’t know about. After tapping the button once to drop the claw, try tapping the button a second time when it is right above the prize. This would allow the claw to move into the “ideal position” to grab the prize.

Claw Coach talked about the handy “double-tap” technique that most people don’t know about. After tapping the button once to drop the claw, try tapping the button a second time when it is right above the prize. This would allow the claw to move into the “ideal position” to grab the prize.

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Kane recommends assessing the claw from different angles. “Most people view the crane machine from the [front] only. When you're lining up the claw with a prize, [peek] around the side of the machine to see if you've hovered properly over the prize,” he said. “It sounds simple but I've noticed so many people not lining up the claw properly because they only view the crane from the front and not the side.”

Kane recommends assessing the claw from different angles. “Most people view the crane machine from the [front] only. When you're lining up the claw with a prize, [peek] around the side of the machine to see if you've hovered properly over the prize,” he said. “It sounds simple but I've noticed so many people not lining up the claw properly because they only view the crane from the front and not the side.”

He added that it’s also important to observe when other people are playing. 

He added that it’s also important to observe when other people are playing.

“Watch to see how the claw is operating. Does it have a strong grab? Are the prongs closing all the way?”

“Watch to see how the claw is operating. Does it have a strong grab? Are the prongs closing all the way?”

Umehara had similar advice. Since different claw machines would require different strategies to win, as a rule of thumb, “watch other people play first, let them lose their money, and once you know the strategy … you come in for the kill.” 

Umehara had similar advice. Since different claw machines would require different strategies to win, as a rule of thumb, “watch other people play first, let them lose their money, and once you know the strategy … you come in for the kill.”

It appears that, in sharp contrast with the box-load of wholesome plushies it contains, the claw machine is really a cut-throat zero-sum game.

It appears that, in sharp contrast with the box-load of wholesome plushies it contains, the claw machine is really a cut-throat zero-sum game.

So, how do you make peace with the claw?

Having gotten all the tips I needed from the claw machine experts, I spent a weekend afternoon at the arcade putting my newfound knowledge to use. From the first round, I was instantly sucked into the addictive but incredibly frustrating world of the claw machine. What followed was 20 failed attempts at pushing the cursed toy into the chute, losing my temper at the adorable money trap, and spending way more than I had intended. Oops. Rookie mistake.

Having gotten all the tips I needed from the claw machine experts, I spent a weekend afternoon at the arcade putting my newfound knowledge to use. From the first round, I was instantly sucked into the addictive but incredibly frustrating world of the claw machine. What followed was 20 failed attempts at pushing the cursed toy into the chute, losing my temper at the adorable money trap, and spending way more than I had intended. Oops. Rookie mistake.

Me at the claw machine. See how close I got? Photo: Koh Ewe

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Claw Coach offered a useful tip to cut your losses: “Before inserting my first coin [I] usually ask myself how much [I’m] willing to spend trying for the prize. …With that, I'll give that machine two tries. ...If the grip is so soft such that it can't shift the prize much, I [won’t] continue.” 

Claw Coach offered a useful tip to cut your losses: “Before inserting my first coin [I] usually ask myself how much [I’m] willing to spend trying for the prize. …With that, I'll give that machine two tries. ...If the grip is so soft such that it can't shift the prize much, I [won’t] continue.”

Turns out, learning to enjoy the claw machine without letting the claw control you is a practice that takes a lot of zen.

Turns out, learning to enjoy the claw machine without letting the claw control you is a practice that takes a lot of zen.

“If you want to play with the claw machine, just play to have fun,” said Umehara. “Go in with the mindset of ‘Hey, [even] if I lose, I had fun.’”

“If you want to play with the claw machine, just play to have fun,” said Umehara. “Go in with the mindset of ‘Hey, [even] if I lose, I had fun.’”

“The claw machine is infamous, and will always be one of the more popular choices for arcades to have. It's loved and hated, mainly because it's a game of skill, and sometimes chance,” said Kane. “You have to know when to walk away sometimes, because you can't always win.”

“The claw machine is infamous, and will always be one of the more popular choices for arcades to have. It's loved and hated, mainly because it's a game of skill, and sometimes chance,” said Kane. “You have to know when to walk away sometimes, because you can't always win.”

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