In pinball one of the fundamental things you must learn is called tilting. Where you manipulate the table by moving it sideways or pushing it forward and backward or lift it up slightly in order to manipulate the ball.

In fact in older pinball machines made before the 1970s players would abuse tilting in order to keep on playing the game endlessly and gain high scores including literally lifting the entire front of the pinball machine up from the ground so the ball would never enter the hole and instead continuously hit parts to gain points nonstop. To the point that mechanisms were added into later pinball machines from the 1970s onward that would force the whole machine to lock down and prevent the game from playing until the ball reaches into the hole and the next ball is launched.

So pinball payers have learned to use tilting in a way thats subtle and more skillfully meticulous and prices to prevent the machine from shutting down while still impacting how the ball moves and is manipulated. So tilting nowadays is deemed acceptable in tournaments including world championship so long as you're able to do it without the machine sensing it and shutting you down. Its an essential skill for competition esp at the highest level.
So is it allowed for you to tilt pachinko cabinets like in pinball? How would pachinko parlors and other gambling venues react if you were using tilting to score balls like in pinball? Is it outright banned including subtle tilting like slightly pushing one part of the machine with your other hand in order to manipulate the trajectory a ball would fall under or slightly smacking it from the bottom right and left side?