The Continuing Death of Pinball 350
angkor writes: "To me, the first video games were something like electonic versions of pinball machines, so it's sad to hear that pinball is apparently dying off." I'd really like to see a pinball game based on Zoolander, but I doubt even that would be enough to reverse the current trend.
wizaaard... (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:wizaaard... (Score:2, Funny)
Hotel: Thank you for calling how may I help you
Me: Yes, what pinball games do you have?
technological advances (Score:5, Funny)
Re:technological advances (Score:2)
I've always prefered good computer-based pinball to the real thing (even setting aside cost).
Zoolander Pinball? (Score:1)
Re:Zoolander Pinball? (Score:2)
They're both obnoxious, loud, low-brow, pillocks, whose only discernible talent is the dubious ability to determine what will appeal most to the average eight year old boy.
But by far the most annoying thing about them is they both make far more money than me! Sods -- where is the justice?
Re:Zoolander Pinball? (Score:2)
"Anyone could die in a freak gasoline fight accident"
That bit pretty much made the movie for me. That and the Starbucks cup flying straight out of the fireball into that camera.
It really is a sad state of affairs (Score:5, Insightful)
Only one in San Francisco/Oakland that I know of... God I miss the silver bowl. Where the hell are they going to put pinball machines?
And bring back arcade games at 7-11 - that's where I learned how to play!
Re:It really is a sad state of affairs (Score:4, Interesting)
I imagine there's quite a great deal more overseas (China, Japan), but that's strictly a guess, as I've never ventured quite that far.
The local university has about the biggest selection of games around, and while I don't attend, I was up there with a friend of mine for the day once, and didn't lose once to any of the "hardcore" gamers stationed around it. I was quite pleased with myself, but after I realized that I'd just spent 8 hours in front of a stand up arcade on one quarter, and wasted the entire day away, I made a conscious decision not to go back. I've got real life responsibilities nowadays, and don't have the kinda time that sort of addiction requires.
-9mm-
Re:It really is a sad state of affairs (Score:3, Informative)
Kenny
Re:It really is a sad state of affairs (Score:2)
Re:It really is a sad state of affairs (Score:4, Funny)
Hmm:
Tacky - check
Seaside - check
village - check
Kent - check
6 arcades - sounds about right.
this wouldn't be Dymchurch, would it?
Re:It really is a sad state of affairs (Score:2, Informative)
Which one? I tend to go to the one behind the Emery Bay Public Markey, in Emeryville. Also there's a bar on Shattuck in Berkeley that has Attack From Mars and a few other pinball tables.
Re:It really is a sad state of affairs (Score:2)
I grew up in Hampton Beach, New Hampshire from '72 to '84 and that place was - and still is - Arcade Heaven; at least a half-dozen of the places ranging in size from small to cavernous as you walk along the boardwalk. Lots of pinball machines, too. If pinballs are gasping for air these days, no one's bothered telling the arcades in Hampton Beach, or the people I always see playing the things when I drive up there during the summer.
receeding for now (Score:1)
Re:receeding for now (Score:2)
WHAT?! Pinball dead?! (Score:5, Funny)
Please someone, tell me this isn't so!!
It has been for a while, man... (Score:2, Interesting)
I have to say, on the cool toy scale, pinball ranks way up there, and it's pretty cheap to get your own machine (well, at least it was a few years ago).
Arcade auctions happen all over the country, and you can still pick up machines at good prices if you know what you're doing.
Got my machine in storage right now. Can't wait to set it up again.
figures (Score:3, Informative)
Re:figures (Score:2)
Pinball is dead because (Score:1)
However If all Pin's were as good as Medieval Madness, I would'nt stop playing pinball... EVER!
Van's Arcade in Puyallup has a few good pins, to get directions and for a virtual tour go to.
www.aeigames.com
Good games endure (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Good games endure (Score:3, Interesting)
And stop comparing apples and oranges: Chess boards and pieces are cheap and easy to make, pinball machines are big expensive things. Chess is a game of thought, pinball is a game of dexterity. Pinball is a BALL game, like baseball or football, except that there's no running, and you play alone. Chess is not a ball game.
Pinball is not a living entity either, so lay off the darwinianism a bit.
Re:Good games endure (Score:2)
Interesting point. Other than solitaire, which is primarily a way to kill time, are there any one-person "games" that have endured in the same manner as chess?
Perhaps one of the problems pinball faces is the lack of a true competitive element--sure, people take turns and compare scores, but it's typically more engaging to pit yourself against another player (even if that player is virtual). New games recognize that, and the trend is to pit players against players.
I've never seen a competitive two-player pinball game (but then I've never really looked).
It's a pitty.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Luckily we still have table football (at least in Belgium). Do you have it in the states too? (I will try to explain the game if you're interested).
Re:It's a pitty.. (Score:1)
Re:It's a pitty.. (Score:1)
>in Belgium). Do you have it in the states too?
We call it "foosball".
And my favorite pool hall yanked out their only pinball machine to put in a foosball table. Reeeally annoying.
-l
FOOZBALL (Score:1)
Re:It's a pitty.. (Score:3, Funny)
"We have it... although I think we call it fooseball."
"We call it "foosball"."
"...playin' any of that there foozball..."
"Well, we're familiar with it as "fussball""
Re:It's a pitty.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:It's a pitty.. (Score:2)
Over here, we call it foozball.
And I suck at it.
Re:It's a pitty.. (Score:2)
Not very common in the Minneapolis area? Are you serious? I live in the Twin Cities too, and foosball tables can be found in lots of non-"fancy" bars, and even some bowling alleys. Also, a crapload of middle-class suburban homes have them in their basements. Growing up in East Bloomington (back when living in Bloomington was fairly cheap), there were two kids on my block alone alone that had them. They're generally cheaper than a good billiards or pool table. Head over to either Peter's Billiards [petersbilliards.com] or All American Recriation and ask the sales guys there, and you will find that they sell plenty of foosball and air hockey tables in Minnesota, both to bars and to homes.
My house didn't have a foosball table when I was a kid (so I always got my ass kicked by the kids that did have them), but my industriously geeky dad built a very nice, solid air-hockey table, after measuring the specs of the one at the store and mail-ordering for the goals, paddles and puck.
I don't think so... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I don't think so... (Score:4, Funny)
Agreed... but for a slightly different reason. The excuse I've always heard from arcade/bar/etc owners is that the cost of keeping a pinball machine in good working order is just way too high: frequent maintenance, hard-to-find parts -- you name it. It's become purely a labor of love thing these days.
And I say this quite sadly, mind you -- pinball kept me sane all through college. Nothing like a quick hour or two of Addams Family or Pinbot after a long night of studying.
P.S. - If anyone knows a place in NYC that still has well-maintained pinball machines, I'll gladly name my first-born after you. (Keep in mind that the more time I spend playing pinball on your advice, the less chance there is of there actually *being* a first-born -- so weigh your options carefully...)
Re:I don't think so... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I don't think so... (Score:2)
Keeping the pinball machines running required someone with specialized knowledge, skill, patience, and time. Keeping the video games running only involved clearing jammed coins and cleaning the glass.
It was pretty obvious at that time that pinball was going to be in trouble, economically speaking.
It's not just pinball (Score:4, Interesting)
Games like DDR breathe some life into them, but it's nothing like the Midway/Atari/Namco/Sega days of long ago.
Games are too expensive, they all seem to be 'imitations', and there's no arcade culture anymore.
Why there aren't/never were coin-op iD games.....arcade play against others all over the world.....
Re:It's not just pinball (Score:4, Interesting)
The arcade games need something else then to attract people in. The various shooting games can do that, especially those with unusual equipment, like Silent Scope. Huge moving racing consoles like Daytona 2 and Indianapolis 500 offer unique features - building a moving platform at home would be way too expensive. Fighting games still have some of the social aspect, though not nearly as much as they used. For me, there's really only even one game that gets me to trek down to my local Gameworks on a regular basis - DDR. Beause it creates an experience not easily duplicated at home, especially when there's a crowd on the machine.
Arcades won't die for a long time, since there are plenty of people that grew up with them enough to keep going. But if they don't find more games with unique features to bring people in, they will get more and more sparse.
lament (Score:2, Informative)
Lament (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Lament (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not like pool table manufacturers are trying to find ways to shove expensive computerized components into a pool table, and pinball has reached a level of maturity where they ought to start acting similarly.
Century? Duh! (Score:2)
Please be kind to us slow-witted types. The 21st century is only a couple years old. Refering to events of 10 years ago as "in the last century" is pretentious and confusing.
Old News, and unavoidable economics. (Score:5, Interesting)
Secondly, pinball machines couldn't keep evoloution-wise. They are too maintainence intensive compared to video arcade games (which break often enough as it is).
To the point: here at the office where I work, there are about 16 arcade machines: 15-video and one pinball. The video games include Lunar Lander, Space Duel, Assault, Mortal Combat 3, pac man, sinistar, soul edge, virtua fighter 2, xybots, crystal castles, a D&D game, Blitz 99, sinistar, and star wars.
The lone pinball machine is Star Trek: The Next Generation.
When it is working, The Star Trek Pinball machine is the most popular arcade machine we have (followed by Mortal Combat 3).
And that is the problem: It's been in a state of disrepair for more than 6 months.
Over the last couple years we have had it repaired 3 times. I remember watching the first repair sessions and was astounded by the large numbe of individual mechanical repairs that had to be made: Bumpers, solnoids, lights, track alignments, and whatnot. Not to mention the table surface then had to be waxed - which changed the play characteristics (until it was played a lot and worn in again).
And then there was a problem with the plastic ball storage holder underneath the deck. The balls had worn a small groove in it, which caused problems for the ball sensor to report no balls available when there really were. Since that custom molded piece wasn't available from the manufacturer anymore, the repair guy took it and filled in the groove with some substance several time - sanding between coats, to bring it back to new condition.
So my conclusion is that modern pinball machines have too many custom parts, and are too physically demanding on them to have the uptime to compete with video games. And not to mention the knowledgable repairmen are hard to find.
And that was in a private setting. In an arcade setting, the operator can not afford for the machine to be down half the time, producing no revenue, and requiring him to spend $$$ on repair guys. The economics just don't work today.
-Mp
Re:Old News, and unavoidable economics. (Score:2, Interesting)
As An Owner... (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with many new pinball machines is flawed design. We've got a Goldeneye pinball in our basement and there are a number of spots where balls constantly get stuck or where pieces break. We've been wires countless times just to keep the top ramp operating properly.
But for the most part, our pinball machines don't require too much attention. Not nearly as much as the Toy Crane we have (which once had wire problems almost weekly). Much of the pinball work is having a ball stuck or a wire break (coin mechanism problems are the norm in all of our machines, mostly because kids decide to jam dimes and pennies in the things to see if it works), we occasionally have a flipper coil go bad or a bumper break. Those problems aren't many. Granted, this could be because people aren't playing them frequently (everyone seems to gravitate towards the 3 Ms. Pacman machines we've got set up on Turbo speed), but maybe it's because many of our pinballs are older and more simple. We've got a Spiderman machine that sits in our basement and works fine except that the soundcard died a few years ago.
It's a shame that most arcades are dying and that it's nearly impossible to keep updated machines in an area where people will play them enough for you to pay for the machines. With pinballs costing over $3000 a piece nowadays, it's more wise to buy a number of older machines and put them in laundramats, pizza places, and convinience stores. The older games (Ms. Pacman, Police Trainer, Galaga) amazingly outperform our newer ones (Mortal Kombat 2, Tekken 3, South Park Pinball) regularly... Perhaps because many people see them as a novelty. But no machines make as much as the Toy Cranes and a prize vendor we have called "Sports Arena" that my dad sticks Zippo lighters and Laser Pens in. Those make fortunes.
Just my two cents.
Charlie
ps. Best Pinball of all time? I loved the Guns N' Roses Machine... perfect flipper balance (you weren't always using one of them like in Goldeneye and others).
Re:As An Owner... (Score:2)
Oh, definitely! The Guns N' Roses board was one of the two best I've ever played. The difficulties of the various challenges on Axel's(sp?) self-designed machine were tuned to perfection. That was a really, really smooth game. --My other favorite was the Indiana Jones board. That was not only a fantastic game, but it was filled with a ton of Indy memorabilia and sound-bite treasures. While I respect Axel Rose's love of pinball, I never much cared for his brand of music. But Indy. . . Now there's a pop-culture icon which still makes me want to have adventures and fight nazis and feel ten years old.
Cool post. Thanks for bringing up those old memories!
-Fantastic Lad
Re:As An Owner... (Score:2)
b r y a n g @ n e w v i e w m e d i a . c o m
Re:Old News, and unavoidable economics. (Score:2)
That's WMS, who made games under both the Williams and Bally labels, you're thinking of. But they weren't the last manufacturer in the U.S., Stern is still putting 10,000 new machines out each year, 2/3 of which are sold overseas.
I learned all of that by actually reading the linked article.
I played the Star Trek: TNG machine once. I got cheated by it, it sent multiple balls into play (no manual plunger, it's automatic), then told me my game was over while there were still about 3 balls going. So I can certainly believe that that machine needs a lot of maintenance.
Pinball Is Dying (Score:4, Funny)
Yet another crippling bombshell hit the beleaguered Pinball community when recently IDC confirmed that Pinball accounts for less than a fraction of 1 percent of all arcade machines. Coming on the heels of the latest Netcraft survey which plainly states that Pinball has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. Pinball is collapsing in complete disarray, as further exemplified by failing dead last the recent Sys Admin comprehensive gaming test.
You don't need to be a Kreskin to predict Pinball's future. The hand writing is on the wall: Pinball faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for Pinball because Pinball is dying. Things are looking very bad for Pinball. As many of us are already aware, Pinball continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood. Non-computer Pinball is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core players.
Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.
Computerized Pinball leaders state that there are 7000 users of Pinball. How many users of non-electronic Pinball are there? Let's see. The number of computerized Pinball users versus Pinball posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 computerized Pinball users. Pinball posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of non-computerized Pinball posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of non-computerized Pinball. A recent article put computerized Pinball at about 80 percent of the Pinball market. Therefore there are 7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 Pinball users. This is consistent with the number of Pinball Usenet posts.
Due to the troubles of Midway, abysmal sales and so on, non-computerized Pinball went out of business and was taken over by Sega, who sells another troubled arcade machine. Now Sega is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.
All major surveys show that Pinball has steadily declined in market share. Pinball is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If Pinball is to survive at all it will be among arcade hobbyist dabblers. Pinball continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, Pinball is dead.
(This has been a test of the moderation system. We now return to your regular geek whining, already in progress.)
Economics (Score:3, Insightful)
Auctions (Score:2, Informative)
Been goin' a long time (Score:3, Insightful)
1000 points for a bumper?? What the heck is that about?
The best pinball machines have only 4-digit scoring systems.
Re:Been goin' a long time (Score:2)
Does anyone remember when 5-ball games were the norm?
Re:Been goin' a long time (Score:3, Interesting)
Five words: (Score:3, Interesting)
It's a GBA game. Rocks real hard. Doesn't quite give you the same experience as a pinball machine, but fun nonetheless.
Rick Boucher (Score:2)
Pachinko (Score:2)
Re:Pachinko (Score:2)
I have a Pachinko machine mounted in my game room (a vintage model from the late 70s). If you look on ebay, it's actually amazing how cheap they are [ebay.com].
Holographic Pinball! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Holographic Pinball! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Holographic Pinball! (Score:3, Interesting)
Too late for me...sappy memories... (Score:3, Interesting)
As a kid, I used to accompany my granddad or my mom to the store to get groceries and occasionally I'd get a dime (that's right, 10) to play a pinball game that sat near the front, near the magazine rack. That machine had a mechanical scoreboard, unlike the LED boards I saw later in life. I recall being absorbed by the lights and the idea of trying to keep the ball in play with those little bumpers (hey, I was easily amused). After a while my mom stopped going to that store and pinball just about left my life for good.
Flash forward 20+ years and a fellow grad student, Joerg, started going to get pizza at a little college-quality Italian place over by the campus. The great arcade next door had closed, mostly, but some of the games had stayed to soak up quarters from the pizza eating patrons. As it turns out Joerg was a real fan of pinball and he enticed me into playing and I got hooked. It was really cool to finally be a bit coordinated and to have the cash to spend to actually get to know a machine. In this case, it was The Addams Family, with little audio clips from the movie. ("The Mamushka!" was my favorite.) Although I never measured up to Joerg's mastery of the game, I found truly irresistible the tactile feedback and use of real, honest-to-physics english that goes into working the table. Sure, feeling the kickback of the gun in Time Crisis is cool, but not like pinball.
Now, that Italian place is gone and the games are gone for good. While I still plan to get a Robotron machine first [linuxgames.com], I'm thinking of adding a pinball machine to my computer and work room when we finally get time to get a real home. They really are awesome.
If you haven't ever played a pinball machine and you get the chance, just remember that those quarters are pretty well-spent, even if just to say that you played pinball for a bit. I bet you'll find you enjoy it, to boot.
Rigged (Score:2, Insightful)
I still enjoy playing on older tables when I have the chance, and I nearly always give any new table I stumble upon at least 3 games worth of opportunity, but it's very rare I stumble across a new table I consider to be a fair challenge.
Excuse me? I think not. (Score:2)
Well.. my opinion (Score:3, Interesting)
The main reason is probably because arcade machines, tend to be generic. Short of the special-equipment games like those from Konami (DDR, etc), all an arcade operator needed was to replace the CPU module, or even just the ROM cartridge. Whereas for pinballs, they have to ship the entire thing around (Pinball2000 attempted to resolve this, but ultimately, died because Williams decided to get out of the pinball business). So instead of a relatively simple job on putting in a new game up, you have to ship this $5000 pinball machine around (shipping $200 typically), rather than order a $100-$500 ROM cartridge (shipping trivial), or a hard drive...
Now, there are recreations of various pins around - thanks to Visual Pinball. Combine it with VPinMAME, and you can play some damn close reproductions to the real machines. (Hint to those interested: avoid the forums, or just read them. There's so much pettiness and egotism and selfishness on them that it's not worth it. Just leech. Your mind will thank you. I was on the forums back when WPCMAME was novel and everyone "played" them, and 2002 was nothing but a disaster for pinball emulation. Plus, you gotta register, and if you want to post, you better not register using a hotmail account - they want *real* email addresses).
However, check out ShivaSite (www.shivasite.com) for some of the best pin info ont he web!
more info (Score:2, Interesting)
Here is a great links for anyone interested in pinball:
The Internet Pinball Database [lysator.liu.se].
Loomis
Pinball will never actually die (Score:2)
Of course, 10 grand isn't the going rate right now, but eventually the prices for a new custom built machine might get that high.
Re:Pinball will never actually die (Score:2)
another example:
The average development cost of a small dobsonian telescope from a major manufacturer is probably pretty high, greater than $100,000. But I can build you one in my shop for less than $800. Probably half that.
I think that an individual with a lot of skill and passion could turn out 10 great pinball games every year. They'd be the result of his experience and tinkering, not a mass market product.
Fewer ways to master Pinball at home (Score:2)
Now, at the arcade, what are you going to put your quarters down on. when you're playing your freinds... one that you know pretty well, and are cokpetitive at, or one you don't really know?
pinball is not dead.- i hope (Score:5, Insightful)
monopoly was very good. Austin powers was ok
of course
Where pinball is dying is a crock really, i know several operators who still operate pinball machines on location
they also dont cost as much as a silent scope
the real issue is operators are lazy
A well kempt pinball will make a lot of $$
http://www.remsbox.com/index.php?content=000000
Good call (Score:2, Funny)
I would pay good money to play such a game, but only if it was really, really, really, ridiculously good-looking.
Completely One-Sided (Score:4, Insightful)
The story is rife with biassed comments like this...
If this article is a true reflection of the industry's opinion then the operators are ignoring a major cause of the decline in pinball machines, and it's not a decline in popularity.
My local arcade has 4 pinballs and 3 of those have been broken and unplayable for weeks. I went to play the last remaining pinball machine last night and it died too: looks like the ball eject has finally failed. Wherever I go it's the same story. The pinball machines are typically broken and unusable. No wonder the arcade managers aren't showing any interest in buying them.
But it's not a lack of popularity from the consumers. Where there is working pinball you'll find hordes of people crowded around it with dozens of dollar coins lined up along the table top. And it's not just 20-somethings. Younger kids and teenagers are just as interested. It's difficult to find a working pinball, and it's even harder to fight your way through the crowd to play on one.
But the article only focusses on the elitist "People don't understand pinball" or the defeatist "Nobody wants to play pinball anymore". I think the article should have at least mentioned "Arcade managers don't like pinball because they're always broken".
This is sad... (Score:2)
I plan to soon start a Pinball enthusiast's club here at Penn State, but rather than being a club solely for playing / competing, I would much rather build a table. To save costs, many off-the-shelf compents will be used, and the game would be controlled by a PC (most likely running linux or the such) with custom interface hardware. The backglass could feature a full-color LCD for score and animations, and all playfield lamps would be LEDs. I think this would be a fun project, and anyone who is interested should email me. Of course, it would help the most if you lived near Penn State. I need not only computer/hardware people other than myself, but also artists, musicians, and people good with woodworking and metal crafts. Any suggestions?
Re:This is sad... (Score:2)
Meh.
Pinball game on Linux (Score:2)
The Death of 2D (Score:2)
My favorite Pinball game: Fun House (with the Chucky style character)
For pinball and classic game lovers in California (Score:2)
It was tres cool last year.
www.caextreme.org [caextreme.org] coming up on Sept. 7-8!
Favorite Pinball Games of All Time (Score:2)
1. Black Knight 2000.. Need i say more?
2. WaterWorld.. One of the best(horrible movie thoe)
3. Terminator 2.. lots of maggots(magnets) but still a great game
4. Bride of PinBot.. Sexist & a good play...
5. can't remember the name but ya got to hit the ball into the vertical area and little rc looking trucks would drive around up there.. stupendous!
just my list...
Re:Favorite Pinball Games of All Time (Score:2)
No, there are magnets. I had the game in my house for 6 months once.. in fact most modern pinball games had magnets for a while.. it sux sometimes when they activate. other then that part T2 was a great pinball game.
Re:Favorite Pinball Games of All Time (Score:3, Informative)
Sorry
"Modern" pinball machines do not include magnets
FWIW, I own four pinball machines, one of them being an Addams Family. I have also been fixing them for ~10 years now. If you can find me an actual magnet in a T2 game, I'll buy you lunch.
Software is to blame. . ! (Score:3)
Video games were cool and hip and new, but I said it then, and I'll say it again; "Space Invaders and Defender may be flashy when new, but they will never be as cool as the raw physics of true random Newtonian chaos in the real world. Pixels are for chumps."
And aren't we all just so very chumpalicious! Mmm. Chumpy. . !
I just finished responding to another fellow who brought up one of the two best pinball boards ever; the Guns N' Roses pinball game; Axle(sp?) supposely being a huge pinball fan himself, had a hand in the design of that board, which is probably why it offered one of the most balanced & smooth pachinko-on-acid game challenges ever. But I was never fond of Axle and Co's musical stylings. Not my thing. --But a board about as good, and with a more accessible and beloved pop-culture icon, was the Indiana Jones pinball game. Now that was a good pinball game! One of the few times intellectual property licensing actually made something good even better.
"Indiana! I am so pleased you are not dead!"
Computers have sucked the life out of everything, replacing the intoxicating randomness and intrinsic hard-fucking-work of physical reality with perfectly repeatable ones and freaking zeros. Comics have been fucked. Special effects in films are no longer interesting. Music is now an exercise in bloated hard drives of 1000 or more MP3's and a feeling of gassy instant gratification. And video games are the most amazing and obvious form of vampirism currently in existence.
And just like a powerful vampire, you bare your neck by choice. It's just so easy, and it feels so good. Even though you can also feel your life spilling away and your world turning grey.
John Carmack's EM tanned pasty face is what happens when you look into a computer screen for too long. That souless realm of data is cold and cold and cold. . .
-Fantastic Lad
The price wrecked all our fun. (Score:2, Funny)
By trying to raise profits, they shot themselves in the foot by eliminating a greater percentage of business that would would have been made back on the price. Rather than making 4 million people paying $0.25, they got 1 million paying $0.50. Sound like advise from the recording industry.
It's either that, or the increase in pinball piracy.
Re:The price wrecked all our fun. (Score:2)
And honestly, pinball is still cheaper than a video game
I can play a pinball machine for 20-30 mins easy
this anology is like saying the death of the automobile is caused by increased gas prices. Or the death of broadcast tv is caused by an increase in PBS telethons.
Inflation sucks, but there is no reason to expect an industry to keep its prices the same over a 20 year period.
If you like pinball.... (Score:2)
Long live the death of pinball. (Score:2)
Here is how the death of pinball works:
1. Operators used to make a lot of money off their pinball machines. Buckets and buckets of it.
2. In the 90's, kids decided video games were cool.
3. Operators make less and less money on pinball machines.
4. Bally/Williams, the biggest pinball producer decides they can't financially justify manufacturing pinball machines. They close their pinball division.
5. Operators start pulling games from locations when they break down, or are worn out.
That's where I come in. Calling all of my local operators. Calling all of the old-school operators from the 60's. Just hoping that somebody has a warehouse full of pinball machines that I can buy, repair, restore, and resell. It's a hobby that I have really grown to love in the past year.
There is an amazing amount of pinball information on the internet, which has allowed me to do this.
Like the Marvin 3m Repair Guides [marvin3m.com] or the rec.games.pinball newsgroup (try groups.google.com). If you are looking to buy a pinball machine, try the Mr. Pinball Classifieds [mrpinball.com]. You can also have a look at most of the pinball machines manufactured in the past decade at the Internet Pinball Database [ipdb.org]
Or you can email me, I can set you up
And don't worry... if you want a game bad enough, and don't live close enough to go pick one up... most sellers of pinball games ship them these days.
Oh, and here is a list of my games:
Medieval Madness - Williams Funhouse - Williams Whitewater - Williams No Good Gofers - Williams Star Trek: The Next Generation World Cup Soccer 94 - Bally Hook - Data East
They are lots of fun
-S
"I'm not dead yet." (Score:3, Informative)
While pingames certainly aren't doing as well as they once were, reports of the death of pinball are certainly premature. There is still a big pinball market outside of the US, which Stern [sternpinball.com] (the only remaining manufacturer) is happy to serve.
Domestically, the market is shifting from arcades (where the games are seldom adequately maintained) to collectors, and the folks at Stern have realized that, modifying their design efforts to appeal more to collectors. One of their latest games, "Monopoly" [sternpinball.com] (designed by the legendary Pat Lawlor [patlawlordesign.com], who also designed "Fun House," "Addams Family," and "Twilight Zone," among others), has been a tremendous success, to the point of extending its productions run...
"The robots can't help you..."Why pinball is dying (Score:2)
It's that every pinball game is exactly the same. There's a ball which rolls at you, you have the flippers, etc. Ok, perhaps they can change things up, put some flippers up top, maybe have some complicated bonus scoring, but the bottom line is, a ball rolls at you, and you hit it up. Repeatedly.
Ok, maybe some people really dig this concept, so they're all over it. But these people are insane.
If you could design a pinball machine that was somehow radically different from others, then you'd have a market for it. But it wouldn't really be a pinball machine then.
The FSF's resurrecting pinball, for one night only (Score:2)
Death of pinball machines == Arcade Owner Greed (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, I hardly ever play pinball any more, even though there are a number of machines within easy travel distances. Why? Most arcades I see ratchet up the "score required for replay" so high as to be nearly unattainable, set the tilt detection so that it darn near responds to vibrations of passing trucks and jets, and set the down angle of the machines toward the drains at unreasonable angles, presumably with the goal of making more money by forcing the player to pay more often.
Instead they make nothing, because I won't play a game that is rigged too heavily against me. (Same reason I don't do casino gambling, BTW)
So what about the few arcades which set the machines more fairly? Instead of being near empty, I notice that folks gather to the pinball, and while waiting for a chance to play, patrons play the other games. I would venture a guess the increased business in the other machines would probably more than pay for any more frequent repairs if that statistic is true.
The best arcade I knew of limited how long one player could stay on the pinball instead of rigging the game, and were ALWAYS busy.
Elegance (Score:2)
I quite like some of the modern pinball machines, but give me an open playfield and the cool physics of some late eighties old school anyday. It is truly sad about the decline of pinball. I think that they will come back, they just have to become cool again.
Maybe we just need to get them into a few cool films, can you imagine the irony of sliding some well placed pinnies into the Matrix sequels. Delicious.
Ob. Fav.: Black Rose - Queen of the Seven Seas. The cannon was superb.
Dead? (Score:2, Informative)
Simplify things (Score:3, Insightful)
Pinball machines got more complex then they needed to be in order to be fun. The cost of developing them went up, and so did the amount of custom parts, rate of failure, and cost of maintenance. I think the pinball manufacturers really went awry here. If they had stuck with affordable, sturdy machines that focused on what makes pinball great, maybe they'd still be making them.
Every pinball machine seems to have to have a licensed franchise plastered on the front of it. What's up with that?!
Of the more modern machines, the ST:TNG machine was one of my favorites. I used to love Pinbot too.
Maybe some day some pinball-building vets will get together and realize that pinball machines could be profitable if they trim the fat.
CA Extreme in SF Bay Area (Score:2)
Don't forget, if you are in the SF Bay Area and like pinball (and classic video games):
California Extreme! [caextreme.org]
It's 9/7-9/8 in San Jose, and they have tons of good restored pinball and video games on free play for the entire weekend. So get in your chance to play pinball on machines that are [b]not[/b] broken :-)
There's nothing like it (Score:2, Interesting)
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The silly parody responses are missing the point (Score:3, Insightful)
It's as if all TV stations and cable channels folded, except for Lifetime. Would you laugh that off or consider it to be the impending death of television?
Re:Anyone see the article picture? (Score:2)
Re:Anyone see the article picture? (Score:2)
Re:Big reason is the maint. (Score:2)
Pinball machines are pretty robust actually. [I own five of them
WMS includes(ed) a list of what you will need to do to each pinball machine, and after howmany X plays. The lists are step by step, and give detailed instructions. If you look in most pinball machines that are in operation now
Pinball machines are actually very sophisticated, and most are designed to tell you exactly what the problem is to minimise downtime.
For example, if you open the coin door on any late wms/bally machine, it will tell you how many errors it has, and the number of the errors. [which you are suposed to look up in your manual, and it will tell you what needs to be fixed/replaced.]
Some machines, like my Creature from the Black Lagoon, check the switches itself. If no one hits the circle bowl at the bottom right of the playfield in (i think) 40 balls (about 12 games) it will automatically trigger an error message telling the operator to check the switch.
Pinball doesn't cost more than a video game.
That is a farse. A new stean Monopoly (the latest one made) will run you $2500 out of crate.
A new Tekken machine will run you $5000 easy [cause its older now]. As for maintanance, last time I checked
End of the day, it all comes down to business. Operators were lulled by the 'street fighter' phenominum. They though all they had to do was plug a machine in, and they would rake it in.
[many operators
Compaired to that perception, cleaning a pinball field seems long and tedious.
What they always ALWAYS forget, is the machine they bought, HAS to be maintained - whatever machine it is. or it stops making money. Video games, in the late 80's early 90's however
when the life of your streetfighter machine is 1-1.5 years before streetfighter-alpha-turbo-whatever comes out. You can managet to make it hobble along with electrical tape. Knowing when the next one comes out, you retire it.
Where as a pinball machine, has much higher play value. new graphics cards (ignoring pinball 2000) don't mean anything. They are MUCH slower to become obsoleate, and therefore
Two of the machines in my basement were operated for 10 years.
10 years, and with minimal restoration, look almost showroom. show me a 10 year old galaga or pac-man that doesnt need a new CRT or a LOT of work.
Re:Big reason is the maint. (Score:3, Interesting)
When I was a teenager
I *ALWAYS* saw the owner of the arcade cleaning them etc
thats probally why I love them so much
He said something along the lines of
'Well kid, those machines over there make me some money. But that Rampage(?) machine, well
YEARS later
Every once in a while I would come across a pin that was handled by an operator like this guy
Re:Have you seen a recent pinball machine??? (Score:2)
There is almost NOTHING in the middle of the playfield (cept the saucer) it was designed that way to be an 'easy-clean' for operators.
actually
But you can buy a pin in middling shape, and get parts to (slowly) fix it up