I don't know if I can pick between the two of them, I guess it depends on what I want to play.
A note about Ritchie: I never see his tables as focusing on speed, but rather on flow which then leads to speed. The greatest part of pinball is the flipper shot because that is the one part of the game where you are in control; good or bad it's all up to the player. So I guess Steve has this incredible desire to bring that ball back to the flipper ASAP so you can keep making good shots or bad shots, and that's where having good flow comes into play.
Look again.
Somebody help me, I can't stop...
Oh boy! OK first, in case you don't know who he is, he's a pinball artist of the 1970's. All his art was for Bally machines. His most famous machines were Fireball (his first), Wizard!, and Capt. Fantastic. He also did Dolly Parton, Nitro Ground Shaker, Ro Go, Air Aces, Mata Hari, The Six Million Dollar Man, Voltan Escapes Cosmic Doom, Monte Carlo, Bobby Orr's Power Play, Old Chicago, Twin Win, Odds & Evens, Future Spa, and Fireball II (his last).Why is Dave Christensen "notorious"? I'm not as steeped in Pinball Lore as I'd like to be.
Oh boy! OK first, in case you don't know who he is, he's a pinball artist of the 1970's. All his art was for Bally machines. His most famous machines were Fireball (his first), Wizard!, and Capt. Fantastic. He also did Dolly Parton, Nitro Ground Shaker, Ro Go, Air Aces, Mata Hari, The Six Million Dollar Man, Voltan Escapes Cosmic Doom, Monte Carlo, Bobby Orr's Power Play, Old Chicago, Twin Win, Odds & Evens, Future Spa, and Fireball II (his last).