Hey let's hear it for hawk! who in the other thread he says he was born in the late 90's, yet he's here practically demanding some old EM's. Who says the younger players will only buy the new fangled flashy pinball machines with more wizard modes than Gandalf himself? They want Log Cabin on mobile.
No
This comes from experience. I've actually played these things via pinball expos. Seriously, your interest in them runs out by the second ball. The 30s were a time when playing with a stick and hoop was considered fun.
Well, even then, many people had to add the gambling element to flipperless pinball to make it fun. The flippers are what turned it from a game of semi-luck to a game of skill.
I would see a virtual flipperless pin as pointless as a virtual pachinko machine (or a virtual slot machine or other luck-oriented devices primarily used for gambling these days). Of course, people have made virtual slot machines and virtual pachinko machines, so maybe there's more of a market than I'd think there would be.
This is different from EMs, particularly the popular EMs of the 1970s. (But even Ace High was fun to me in the old Gottlieb collection.)
no, pinball is not pinball without flippers.
To paraphrase a Zero Punctuation review of Peggle (which is quite similar to flipperless pinball), flipperless pinball is a game of luck, unless you have a degree in geometry from the university of smarta**e.
Oh man, wasn't central park enough torture...that monkey with the bell haunts my dreams.
Yahtzee is my hero when it comes to game reviewers
Central Park is hardly representative of EM tables, and it's a strange configuration. Big Shot is a much better representation of the era I think, though there were some strange configurations, the two flippers at the bottom was more of a standard than anything else.
Three EMs I'd be over the moon to see would be Royal Flush, Triple Strike and Strange World (another strange configuration but an interesting table).
I would buy any table that they put out because i get a decent amount of enjoyment out of everything they've put out so far. I like EM tables because they bring a different experience to the table and allow for shorter games, but have that "I can do better", or what I like to call the Tetris effect, of
From the 30s? No. They are interesting to see in person as part of the larger history of pinball, but would get very old, very quick in digital form. I also think FS would have trouble marketing any flipperless pinball machine. If they are going to put more EMs in TPA, they are probably best off going with games from the 70s with 3 inch flippers (with the possible exception of Fireball due to its popularity). Anything prior to that and luck becomes too much of a factor to be fun for many people, especially as nudging can never be totally simulated by any pinball game.