Pace-O-Matic's Pennsylvania Skill Games Are Still Legal
November 03, 2021
Pennsylvania Skill, powered by Pace-O-Matic, releases statement regarding Clearfield County District Attorney Ryan Sayers’ favorable decision related to our skill games
HARRISBURG- Pennsylvania Skill, powered by Pace-O-Matic, released the following statement regarding Clearfield County District Attorney Ryan Sayers’ order to suspend seizures of only Pennsylvania Skill games and return pieces of equipment and cash stemming from September raids conducted by the state Bureau of Liquor Control and Enforcement (BLCE). These actions are pending the outcome of our lawsuit in Commonwealth Court to again verify our game’s legal standing.
“We thank Clearfield County District Attorney Ryan Sayers for his professionalism and the time he has spent to understand and address the difficulties resulting from recent BLCE seizures of our Pennsylvania Skill games. DA Sayers worked diligently to resolve this issue in the best interests of the law, legal process, taxpayers, small businesses, and fraternal clubs, including veteran groups, which count on skill games for much-needed revenue.
“The fact remains that every time our games’ legal status has been challenged, the courts have returned favorable rulings to Pace-O-Matic, Miele Manufacturing, which builds our games, and Pennsylvania Skill operators, small businesses and fraternal clubs.”
The Only Legal Skill Game in Pennsylvania
The software which PA Skill utilizes has been adjudicated in a Pennsylvania court of law as a skill predominate game.
PA Skill software has been certified by a nationally recognized game Testing Lab
The Pennsylvania Skill game terminals use Pace-o-Matic® skill game software.
No Internet Connection needed
Players can WIN every time based on skill & not chance.
Don't Get caught with an immitation PA Skill game
The court ruling received on the Pennsylvania Skill game only applies to this skill game. No other game is covered under this ruling. Many other machines have come into the PA market stating they are the same as the Pennsylvania Skill game so they are just as legal. That simply is not true. The fact is most of these games are not skill based at all. They contain the element of chance rather than skill making them true gambling devices. The operators of these devices are exposing their customers to criminal activity that could cost them heavy fines or loss of PA Beverage license privileges.