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How did your love for pinball begin?
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<blockquote data-quote="noneed4me2" data-source="post: 53852" data-attributes="member: 2045"><p>I love reading all you guy's stories as its a testament to how these games have affected our lives. Even though we all gotta deal with crap its great to loose yourself in a great pinball table. </p><p></p><p>I was blessed growing up near a place in the late eighties and nineties called Castle Park in Riverside, CA. This place had a huge row of modern pins along a wall downstairs in the castle proper, and an upstairs area dedicated to early video games and em pins. Looking back now the owners must have been fans cause I rarely saw a pin down for any length of time and they were always well maintained in other aspects. They would have days where you could go in and for like 10 bucks or less you could play any machine for extended times as all were set to free play. </p><p></p><p>I am planning a return there with my kids to show them what an arcade experience was like outside of chuck rat's. Overall socal isn't to bad a place to live if your into pinball.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="noneed4me2, post: 53852, member: 2045"] I love reading all you guy's stories as its a testament to how these games have affected our lives. Even though we all gotta deal with crap its great to loose yourself in a great pinball table. I was blessed growing up near a place in the late eighties and nineties called Castle Park in Riverside, CA. This place had a huge row of modern pins along a wall downstairs in the castle proper, and an upstairs area dedicated to early video games and em pins. Looking back now the owners must have been fans cause I rarely saw a pin down for any length of time and they were always well maintained in other aspects. They would have days where you could go in and for like 10 bucks or less you could play any machine for extended times as all were set to free play. I am planning a return there with my kids to show them what an arcade experience was like outside of chuck rat's. Overall socal isn't to bad a place to live if your into pinball. [/QUOTE]
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