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Monkeybug |
October 16, 2009, 11:23am |
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NBA Fastbreak could be linked together for head to head play.
Of course... we all know how popular NBA FB is. |
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gmaranda |
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Hello, some good comebacks (I always enjoy a good debate) I never thought I had the answer but I truly believed that pinball did not stay mainstream because it did not evolve with the times. Just check out what you get with a $300 console such as PS3 of xbox 360. Granted games are not cheap but you can get a new games once in a while and every time you get something new. I don't pretend to have the solutions to the world of pinball but everything in business that stayed status quo simply disappeared from the main market. Maybe it was destined to simply become an after market industry for years to come. However, I believe that a group of fanatic such as yourself (I'm getting there..) could potentially find the solution..........who knows!! Nice chatting  |
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websherpa |
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Pinball is now nostalgia, pure and simple. They cost too much to make in today's Made in China plastic world, and bring in too few bucks in their traditional home (bars) where a couple more tables would bring in a lot more. Pinball has evolved, it's just that it IS video games and DS and such ... it has already evolved. There will likely always be a collector market for them, but I don't expect a mainstream comeback. |
| Wayne (webSherpa) "WEB" "Pinballs do not die - they plunge, flip and then sewer." http://www.pinballisnotdead.com/ |
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Vengeance |
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and Pinball did evolve with the times, Pinball 2000 was that evolution. I believe had Williams given Pinball 2000 a chance it would have changed the face of pinball as we know it today and based on what they were saying from the Tilt move it might have even done well, maybe not as well as it had done it the boom years but better then it's doing now. |
| Adam Becker |
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websherpa |
October 18, 2009, 10:22pm |
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I don't know, the technology still requires expensive components and would have to find a home amongst adults in bars (since arcades are pretty much a thing of the past .... well at least fading....). I mean, video arcade machines are getting far and few between other than driving games and first person shooters which have some accessories that are harder to "justify" at home... they evolved into home gaming systems. If you or anyone can predict what's to come next, you should make a mint in the stock market... ...what about "stay at home school" - that seems to me to be one way that school boards could save a mint on real estate and teachers. With today's wide Internet access and ability for certain safeguards and compliance - that could be the next evolution in technology. And if that is the case, Massive Multi-player Online Gaming would take an even bigger leap forward since they would become the "playgrounds" of tomorrow (well they are almost already the playgrounds of today - save that older more "socially involved" youngsters gravitate towards texting, making videos of themselves (and watching others) and other online social meeting grounds. Maybe we can get some answers from Hypno Toad.  |
| Wayne (webSherpa) "WEB" "Pinballs do not die - they plunge, flip and then sewer." http://www.pinballisnotdead.com/ |
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jonny_eh |
October 18, 2009, 11:34pm |
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The demise of pinball is depressingly simple, the death of arcades. Ever since the advent of video arcades, pinball's fortunes have been linked with the popularity of arcades. The main reason why TAF and it's brethren did so well was that it was in arcades at the same time as Street Fighter 2. Now that home gaming systems have gotten advanced and cheap enough to kill of video arcades, there just isn't enough places to put games.
Just ask any of the ops on this board. Workingpins complains all the time about having no good places to put his pins. Arcades just don't exist anymore. Sure, newer technology would really help sales but the state of the industry probably wouldn't change all that much. You could also blame the fact that people don't carry around as much change anymore due to debit cards and other factors but I'm still convinced that pinball's demise is linked with arcade games. |
| Have | Want | -The Getaway: High Speed II!! -Spider-Man -F-14 Tomcat -Guns N' Roses -Lord of the Rings -Twilight Zone | -Medieval Madness! -Indiana Jones (Williams) -Star Trek: The Next Generation -Champion Pub -Terminator 3 -Congo -Johnny Mnemonic -Tales of the Arabian Nights
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wbradley |
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On the up side, I believe the market for replacement parts, retrofit and refit will continue to grow. The Lost Vegas project is probably just the beginning of a relatively economical way to intorduce "new" games into the market for the niche enthusiast.
Theres a lot of old tired machines that could easily be refitted into new machines with inovative features at a fraction of the cost to build from scratch.
Pinball is analogous to our society. It is an aging population and therefore there will be a greater need to provide care and fix the malfunctions that are bound to occur. Kudos to companies like Rottendog, Pinled, CPR and several others. They will need the full support of consumers in order continue their positive direction.
Real tangible physics in a life-sized game is costly to make in the age of virtual physics. And to that end, perhaps there will be further development in the Global VR or similar platforms that make them desireable at the local bar or movie theatre. Further, perhaps the packaging of kits to build similar units as a sort of pinball MAME will become less costly and readily available.
There is hope. But also change. |
| Ten SS games...but 8 is my limit! |
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Sparky |
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On the up side, I believe the market for replacement parts, retrofit and refit will continue to grow. The Lost Vegas project is probably just the beginning of a relatively economical way to intorduce "new" games into the market for the niche enthusiast.
Theres a lot of old tired machines that could easily be refitted into new machines with inovative features at a fraction of the cost to build from scratch.
I agree... I hear a lot of operators complaining that recent machines are too expensive and need too much maintenance compared to older early SS machines. Maybe the solution for pinball is to keep it simple yet fun. Toys are fun on a playfield and attract people to play, but are costly to make and costly to maintain. I am sure that a pin with a simpler layout with a deep ruleset and a great theme can work. Especially if you cut the cost by a grand... |
| Retiring soon... |
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jonny_eh |
October 19, 2009, 10:27am |
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Less toys and deep gameplay? Why, that's the opposite of the direction Stern is going! |
| Have | Want | -The Getaway: High Speed II!! -Spider-Man -F-14 Tomcat -Guns N' Roses -Lord of the Rings -Twilight Zone | -Medieval Madness! -Indiana Jones (Williams) -Star Trek: The Next Generation -Champion Pub -Terminator 3 -Congo -Johnny Mnemonic -Tales of the Arabian Nights
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