Gacha & Prize Game Machine Supplier

3
products in this line
2
categories covered

Gacha and prize & skill machines cover the two lowest-friction formats on an amusement floor: gacha needs no player skill and almost no supervision, while prize & skill machines add just enough challenge to justify a ticket payout without the mechanical complexity of a claw machine. Jisun manufactures both as a source factory, supplying arcade operators, family entertainment centers, and wholesale distributors worldwide.

Gacha / Capsule Machines

Gacha machines are a low-complexity, low-maintenance amusement format: players insert a coin or token and receive a randomized capsule prize. Restocking is the only ongoing labor cost — there is no gripper mechanism or claw calibration to maintain — which is why they show up in unstaffed spots like mall entrances, checkout lanes, and retail counters where operators want passive revenue.

Prize & Skill Game Machines

Prize and skill game machines cover screen-based or mechanism-based interactive games distinct from claw machines — players use timing, aim, or coordination to win tickets or prizes. Because the payout is skill-weighted rather than fully random like gacha, they read as more “winnable” to players, which operators commonly use to balance a redemption-focused arcade floor alongside pure chance formats.

Sourcing Considerations

As with our other product lines, cabinet branding, prize mechanism configuration, and payment method can typically be customized for OEM/ODM orders — see our OEM/ODM Process page. For quantity and lead time guidance, see MOQ & Lead Time.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is a gacha (capsule) machine?
A gacha machine, also called a capsule machine, dispenses a randomized toy or item sealed inside a capsule in exchange for a coin or token. It is a low-maintenance amusement format popular in malls, arcades, and retail entrances.
What is a prize & skill game machine?
Prize and skill game machines are screen- or mechanism-based interactive games (distinct from claw machines) where players use skill to win tickets or prizes, commonly used in family entertainment centers and redemption arcades.
Why do gacha machines often appear in clusters rather than as a single unit?
Operators frequently deploy 4-8 gacha units side by side with different capsule themes so a single stop covers multiple price points and IP interests — this also lets one restocking visit refill several machines at once, which is a meaningful labor saving versus scattering single units around a venue.

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