I just got my first newsletter email in about a year. I never bothered to try and resubscribe, and it just appears after all this time. Now, that's odd.
Spirit of 76 is so important to the history of pinball that it belongs in TPA. It sold 14,000+ units in the various versions (including Pioneer and New York.) The latter celebrated the return, after decades, of legal pinball to NYC.
I agree with Jeff that both pins are rated high for their era.
Because EBD is a classic, would be the logical response. Sharkey's steals the EBD layout, and throws in a few toys. EBD is one of the best one-ball games ever made. TPA should represent the history of pinball. So far, it represents the recent history of pinball (with few exceptions.)
You really should be making your purchases through Steam for your Mac. This gives you access to Steam sales, and also allows you to play TPA on both Mac and PC. Purchases transfer across a Steam account. The other obvious advantage is the superior graphics on the PC version (the Mac versions are...
Sure. Paragon will be released, right after Seawitch and Eight Ball Deluxe are released. I voted for all of these runners up, and I don't expect to see any of them in TPA.
The Mac version is essentially a straight port from iOS. It lacks basic features, and has for a long, long time.
Sadly, the workaround is putting a PC partition on your Mac. If you make your TPA purchases via Steam then you have the ability to play on Mac or PC. I would strongly advise against...
I can narrow it down to the range of 1979-81. Paragon and Eight Ball Deluxe are the pillars of my pinball world. I love the better wide body machines. The innovations in sound, lighting, locks, voice synthesis, multiple playfields... pinball was very different after those three years. Gorgar...
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