- Mar 17, 2012
- 4,293
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Besides that, the PHOF tables and probably TPA ones too are much easier than in real life. Guess I'm not the only one been humiliated by a real MM after playing it on a console.
I've already answered you in a different thread as to why that is:
One, the replay/specials being extra balls helps inflate scores. (Although it is not true that real tables never do this, on many tables this is an operator-adjustable setting. The Ripley's at CP Pinball gives an extra ball at its replay score. It comes from the days where there were laws against pinball machines giving away free games, many EM machines came in regular and add-a-ball [replays and specials are extra balls] versions for that reason.)
Two, it is far easier to nudge using an analog stick or a touchscreen than it is to properly manipulate a 250-lb table.
Three, the tilt is very liberal on TPA tables. You can get away with murder, although I notice that iOS version of MB seems to be tightened up a bit relative to the older tables...? Most of the real tables I play are pretty tilty.
Four, you can pause a TPA table whenever you like and catch your breath, take a drink, wipe your hands down, whatever. There's no stopping a physical table except between balls. (That sounded vaguely dirty...)
Five, TPA tables seem to use mostly factory settings, although I've noticed MB's ball saver has been turned on (it normally isn't - but please, leave it on!). Real tables are often set on hard, and often the outlane posts are up. If the table was used in a tournament recently, it may still be in a truly murderous state if the operator forgot to put it back in its normal condition.
As best I can tell from personal experience with 7 of the 10 real tables corresponding to TPA tables, the rule of thumb seems to be to divide your average score on the TPA table by 10 to get a rough idea of how you'll do on the real one. Of course, this varies depending on how the real machine is set, how much prior experience you've had on the real one, and the actual table itself.
It should also be noted that once FarSight gets the flipper physics and control issues sorted, TPA scores are likely to exceed real scores by an even greater margin.