If you’re the kind of person who plans vacations around vintage arcades, hunts down rare pinball machines, or misses that one table you played years ago, there’s now a surprisingly useful tool built just for you.
Called Pinball Map, the free website and mobile app does exactly what its name suggests. It helps players locate public pinball machines almost anywhere in the world, whether they’re tucked away inside dedicated arcades, neighborhood bars, restaurants, museums, breweries, or even campgrounds. Think of it as Google Maps, but instead of helping you find coffee shops, it points you to your next pinball game.
The platform has quietly become one of the internet’s best-kept hobbyist projects, powered not by a tech giant but by a community of volunteers determined to keep the global pinball scene alive.
A community-built map for pinball lovers
Users can either search for nearby venues that host pinball machines or look up a specific table by name to find where it’s currently available. Selecting a location reveals useful information including the venue’s address, contact details, website, and a complete list of machines available on-site.
The service is completely free, requires no account, contains no advertisements, and doesn’t track users’ locations. It’s also open source, allowing anyone to inspect how the platform works or even contribute to its development. Behind the scenes, the database is maintained by roughly 100 volunteer administrators along with thousands of users who continuously update machine locations, report removals, submit new venues, and even log high scores. Recent updates have expanded the platform with better statistics, location photos, performance improvements, and enhanced user profiles.
According to community discussions, the project has been running for nearly two decades and remains entirely donation-supported, with developers deliberately avoiding advertising or commercial partnerships.
Pinball occupies a unique place in gaming.
Unlike classic arcade titles that have largely survived through emulators and digital collections, authentic pinball remains tied to physical machines packed with mechanical components. Unless you own one yourself, the only way to experience a particular table is to find it in the real world.

For enthusiasts, it transforms travel into a scavenger hunt, making it easy to discover hidden machines in unfamiliar cities or revisit favorite tables from years past. The platform also encourages players to support local arcades, bars, and independent venues that continue to invest in maintaining these increasingly rare machines. The timing is particularly interesting as pinball continues enjoying something of a renaissance. Modern manufacturers are producing new licensed machines, while collectors and younger players alike have embraced the hobby, helping sustain a niche that many once assumed would disappear.
As more venues add machines and volunteers continue expanding the database, Pinball Map is becoming more than just a locator app. It’s evolving into a living archive of one of gaming’s oldest and most tactile experiences, ensuring that no matter where you travel, your next game might be just around the corner.

