Jisun

Boxing & Sports Arcade Machine Manufacturer

6
products in this line
2
categories covered

Boxing and ball & pinball machines sell on spectacle as much as gameplay — a loud punch reading or a ball rattling toward a jackpot pocket draws a crowd around the player, which is why operators place them where the reaction is visible rather than tucked in a corner. Jisun manufactures both categories as a source factory, supplying arcade operators, family entertainment centers, and sports-bar-style venues.

Boxing Machines

Boxing machines (arcade punching machines) measure punch force through a sensor pad and display a score, usually tied to a ticket or prize payout tier. Because the scoreboard is visible from across the room, operators commonly position them at entrances or main aisles as a deliberate crowd-drawing anchor rather than blending them into the rest of the floor.

Ball & Pinball Machines

Ball and pinball machines are skill-based games where players roll or launch a ball toward scoring targets. Their head-to-head, repeat-play nature complements claw machines and redemption games in a mixed entertainment center floor plan, and they hold up well as a secondary format alongside a boxing machine anchor.

Customization & Sourcing

Cabinet branding, scoring display, and ticket/prize payout mechanisms can typically be customized for OEM orders. See our OEM/ODM Process and MOQ & Lead Time pages for sourcing details.

Related Categories

Related Products

Other Manufacturing Lines

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a boxing machine (arcade punching machine)?
A boxing machine, also called an arcade punching machine, measures a player's punch power via a sensor pad and displays a score, often awarding tickets or prizes based on performance. It is a high-engagement, high-visibility format popular in arcades and entertainment centers.
What are ball & pinball machines used for?
Ball and pinball machines cover skill-based ball-rolling and pinball-style games where players aim for target scores, commonly used in family entertainment centers and redemption arcades alongside claw and prize machines.
Why do operators place boxing machines near entrances or high-traffic aisles?
The scoreboard and punch sound draw attention from a distance and create a spectator moment around the player, which pulls foot traffic deeper into the venue — operators typically treat it as a footfall driver for the rest of the floor, not just a standalone revenue unit.

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