playfield
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]playfield (plural playfields)
- A playing field.
- 1884, Alexander Maxwell, The History of Old Dundee:
- The position of the playfield is here identified as lying north of this open space between it and the burn, and occupying the haugh which extended west […]
- 1974, Comprehensive Plan for Covington, Kentucky, and Environs:
- It has been recommended by some recreational specialists that there should be one such playfield for each 500 children of high school age.
- The area within which a game (especially a video game) is played.
- 1977, Popular Science:
- The game has a tilt feature — tilt Fireball and a tilt sign glows and the scoring stops. The full-sized, full-color commercial playfield even has a special friction silk-screened surface so the ball will roll and not slide.
- 2007, Friedrich von Borries, et al: Space Time Play: Computer Games, Architecture and Urbanism:
- In this case, the playfield is more disorienting and feels more like the maze that it is.
Translations
[edit]playing field — see playing field
area within which a game is played
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