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TOKYO - As school and work wrap up, crowds fill Tokyo's many bustling arcade halls, not to battle it out in fighting games, but to snag plush toys from claw machines.
In one of these gaming meccas in the Japanese capital's Ikebukuro district, aisles of crane games stretch as far as the eye can see.
The crown jewels of the arcade industry, they occupy the building's first two floors, relegating video games to the basement and upper levels.
"Crane games are keeping the sector afloat," said Morihiro Shigihara, an industry expert and former arcade manager.
"Arcade operators, machine manufacturers, and even prize suppliers depend on this business," he told AFP.
Some 80 percent of the 22,000 arcades Japan had in 1989 have shut down, but revenues have held up thanks to claw machines, according to the Japan Amusement Industry Association.
Their share of revenue has climbed since 1993 from 20 percent to more than 60 percent, the association said.
Suzuna Nogi, a 20-year-old student, visits these arcades at least twice a week in search of "big plushies" on which she can spend up to 3,000 yen ($19) at 100 yen per try.
"What I like best is the sense of accomplishment," she said, even though there is no guarantee of success.
Nogi added that she enjoys "the thrill of not knowing whether you'll manage to grab something or not".
The sensitivity of the claw arms is adjusted by operators "based on the cost of the prizes and revenue targets", Shigihara said.
"You can also make the game easier to compete with a nearby arcade."
From cigarettes to candy
This year, the industry is officially celebrating the 60th anniversary of these construction crane-inspired machines in Japan.
But they have actually been around since before World War II, said Benoit Bottos, who wrote his doctoral dissertation on the subject at Japan's Chuo University.
Older models, installed in cafes or bowling alleys, sometimes offered lighters and cigarettes, but those prizes quickly gave way to children's candy.
In the late 1980s, the machines began to gain traction, notably with game company Sega's 1985 invention of the "UFO Catcher", which switched up the older version that forced players to lean in and look down.
A section of the "New UFO Catcher" claw crane game machine at Japanese video game and entertainment company Sega's booth during the Amusement Expo 2025 in Tokyo. (AFP)

A man pays to play a claw crane game machine inside a shop at the Akihabara district of Tokyo. (AFP)