Kemetman72
Banned
- Sep 12, 2012
- 398
- 0
Do you think that this would further immerse the player or do you think it's not a bug deal?
I don't know about that. I like to hear only the table I'm playing in all it's sonic glory as if it was set up in my living room...not all sorts of other games going on in the background. I believe Pinball Hall of Fame for the PSP (at least) had this ambient arcade sound which I never cared for.TPA needs to support 5.1 Audio with an entire arcade atmosphere... imagine hearing a random jackpot from something else in TPA about 10 feet to your right while you are playing whatever table.
I wholeheartedly disagree with this comment. The mechanical sounds of pinball are an important part of the realism and total immersion of the simulation.Petty, ticky tack feature that serves no purpose.
It's actually the same with ProPinball, if you turn the music off you can hear the ball rolling. With the music on it is much harder. But anything that adds to the realism and ambiance is welcome in my opinion.
5.1 surround would be nice, simply because I wouldn't have to raise my volume between TPA and my other games. Not all of these Pinball machines were mono sound anyway were they?
--Jim
Almost all of them were mono. Even the ones that had two speakers were just dual mono. But those of us that want 7.1 surround want it for the ambient arcade sounds. I'd also like to be able to play my own music from the xmb in that mix.
Hmm that's actually surprising about the mono sounds.
I don't know about ambient arcade sounds. It might be neat, it might be distracting from the game if it's too crazy. That's one thing I never liked about arcades; sometimes I couldn't hear my own game because of the noise around me. I wouldn't really want that to be replicated at home.
One thing is for certain though, with just mono sound TPA is noticeably lower volume than all of my other games. When playing TPA I have to bump my receiver up almost 10 points of volume, and when I switch to another game sometimes I forget to bring it back down, which leads to a nasty surprise.
For those of you who have the Lemmings game -- you know what I mean.
--Jim