Instant visible result
Prize Wheel, Electronic Wheel of Fortune and Plinko make the result visible to the player and the queue. Decide the segment or landing-slot values before the event and brief the team handing out prizes.

Nine different ways to run a giveaway, from a visible prize locked in a coded safe to a spinning wheel, disc drop, capsule machine or prize crane.
From £595
From £395
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From £495
From £395
From £595
From £395
From £495
From £395
The game controls how people take part. Crack the Code asks a visitor to try a four-digit combination while the prize stays in view inside the acrylic safe. Plinko turns one disc drop into a result at the bottom of the board. The mechanical Prize Wheel has 32 numbered segments, while the Electronic Wheel of Fortune uses lights, sound and a button-triggered stop.
A Prize Crane lets you set the claw strength and fill the cabinet with suitable merchandise or capsules. The Giant Gashapon dispenses capsules from its clear dome. Grab a Grand puts a player inside a voucher whirlwind for a timed round, while Ballnado uses foam balls in the same style of tank. The Gold Bar Challenge makes the act of lifting the bar the route to a win.
Prize Wheel, Electronic Wheel of Fortune and Plinko make the result visible to the player and the queue. Decide the segment or landing-slot values before the event and brief the team handing out prizes.
Crack the Code keeps the main prize on display behind a four-digit keypad. The organiser controls how codes are distributed, how many attempts each person receives and what happens after a winning entry.
A crane grabber or Gashapon puts merchandise or capsules inside the machine. Check the size and suitability of what you plan to load before the event so the mechanism and prize format work together.
Grab a Grand and Ballnado put the player inside the action for a 30-second round. They create a different kind of queue from a quick wheel spin and benefit from a clear operating area.
Crack the Code, Plinko and Prize Wheel can support contact collection: an organiser might issue a code, disc or spin after a visitor completes the chosen entry step. The equipment does not automatically capture personal data. Agree in advance who will manage the entry wording, consent, privacy information, storage and any follow-up communication.
Decide that journey before doors open. It should be clear who can enter, how often, what the prize is and how a winner is selected or verified. We can supply optional operating or promotional staff where required, but the promotion and its data handling still need an agreed plan.

Backboards, plinths, cabinet panels and wheel faces can carry campaign artwork where the chosen unit allows it. Our branding service covers artwork sign-off, print, application and removal. Send prize sizes, quantities and artwork timings with the brief so we can check the physical setup rather than leaving it until delivery day.
These games often sit within a wider brand activation or exhibition games package. For games based on score rather than chance, browse reaction and interactive games. We deliver to venues including NEC Birmingham, Manchester Central and ACC Liverpool.
No. Crack the Code, Plinko and Prize Wheel can form part of a contact collection journey, but they do not automatically capture data. Agree in advance who will handle consent, privacy information and any details collected.
Usually, subject to the chosen machine and the size and shape of the items. Send us the details first, especially for a prize crane or Gashapon capsule machine, so we can confirm a workable format.
The approach varies by product. Wheel segments and Plinko landing slots can be allocated to outcomes, the crane has adjustable claw strength, and Crack the Code uses a chosen four-digit combination. We will explain the practical controls for the game you shortlist.