$5/£4/whatever for a pinball table is still a great deal. That would last me 30-60 minutes on a real machine.
then sell your car and buy last need for speed game instead. dont compare RL entertainments with video games. try do it between video games only:
so i can see what the HUGE games like Skyrim is same price as TPA's 1st season pass.
Non diehard fans are busy finding hours of entertainment from the other thousands of games available for 5 dollars that aren't some table from the early 80s they can't identify with. Especially one that they would play a few times and never again.
Entertainment is entertainment, regardless of the source.
I was merely giving some very common examples of other entertainment that can far surpass the price of buying tables on TPA.
IF you have an arcade close to where you live or work, you can blow through cash at a fairly quick rate. For most normal people, spending the few bucks that it costs to buy TPA table or pair of tables would take an hour or less... or perhaps two hours if you are good.
If the arcade isn't close... there's the cost of transportation to and from the arcade to consider.
For most beer drinkers, the time it would take to consume $5-7 worth of beer isn't very long.
The price of a movie ticket usually far exceeds the cost of TPA tables and lasts 2-3 hours at most.
None of that has a dang thing to do with selling my car and buying anything.
Yes, they are DIFFERENT forms of entertainment, but they are still entertainment... and TPA is damn cheap entertainment!
$5 gives you basically unlimited play time for the tables you purchase.
I simply don't understand how some people can spend thousands of dollars on their entertainment & gaming systems, internet connections and the like and come absolutely unhinged over a few bucks per table.
Oh really now? Then what am I to make of this:Based on what, exactly?
Such speculation without anything to back it up is hardly worth posting.
Where's the supporting evidence? It appears that you are guilty of the same lack of citation that you constantly badger others about. (And don't bother posting the evidence. I agree with the assertion itself; I'm just pointing out the hypocrisy in not citing supporting evidence when you have repeatedly called out others for not doing so.)Those folks also tend to have a lot more disposable income than those that weren't around then.
Where's the supporting evidence? It appears that you are guilty of the same lack of citation that you constantly badger others about. (And don't bother posting the evidence. I agree with the assertion itself; I'm just pointing out the hypocrisy in not citing supporting evidence when you have repeatedly called out others for not doing so.)
This is a fan forum, not Wikipedia. Speculation, even baseless speculation (within limits), is allowed here. We assume that our members are intelligent human beings (until they demonstrate otherwise) and have sufficient critical thinking skills to decide for themselves whether to believe what they read or not, and that they have the mental wherewithal to do their own research if they are in doubt. This is also why Pin Wiz maintains his "official" information thread, so that people who want the facts and nothing but the facts know where to go to find them.
The other moderators and I are not going to require members to provide footnotes with every post, nor are we going to punish them if what they assert turns out to be false, unless we determine they are maliciously spreading false rumors.
"pinball is americana" because it was true only 20 years ago
We asked designer Greg Kmiec to comment on why the 3-flipper version was created. He replies:
I wouldn't have originally designed Paragon with that lower right section that way because it looks like the pinball could get stuck between those two wire forms.
If my memory serves me correctly, I seem to recall that the Italian, French and German markets were quite strong for Bally during that period and Bally was often visited by various foreign distributors. I recall that they relayed the fact that their players liked to hold the pinball by the flippers. The way it was relayed to designers through interpreters was that their players liked to hold the pinball on the flipper, take a drink of beer and brag to other players about the skill shot they were about to shoot. That couldn't be done with the original Paragon design. I tried something different with Paragon, since it was Bally's first wide-body game. It was relayed to Bally that the foreign player preferred one return lane on each side at the bottom of the game that "returned" the pinball to the flippers for a playfield skill shot. This type of design became known within the industry as the "Italian Bottom." It was used extensively then throughout the industry and is still in use today.
I do seem to recall adjustments being made to Paragon for foreign games [to have the "Italian Bottom"]. I don't recall how many were changed or if they were changed for only one country or one distributor, but they were definitely changed in the factory on the production line. It might have been due to a combination of two factors: the foreign distributors requesting something their players wanted and Bally realizing a cost reduction on the Bill-Of-Materials by eliminating a flipper. Bally might have been willing to change part of a production run just to sell a new wide-body game.
Reportedly, all Paragon games in France have only 3 flippers.
looks like you simply ignored my comment about comparing TPA price with other video games price and simply repeated your previous post.
ok, you can continue to compare cucumbers with cactuses.
just wonder why you link US related demographic market reseach to the TPA which is selling worldwide
I never doubted you would be able to do so. But you did not actually do so in this case. After you have challenged so many other people in various threads for not providing supporting evidence for their claims, for you to in turn make an assertion without providing supporting evidence is hypocritical. Unfortunately for you, I noticed and called you out on it. If I hadn't, someone else probably would have.If I'm ever questioned on claims or assertions I make in this or any other forum, you'd better believe that I'll be able to back up what I say.
You missed the point. I told you to not bother with the evidence because, as I stated, I already consider that particular assertion true. So I don't need to see more evidence. (Also, I feared - correctly - that you might try to correct your mistake by providing a wall of evidence, to the further distraction of the original topic).You say don't bother posting evidence, yet you call me guilty of hypocrisy for not doing so.
When you make a public post as a moderator call me out for something like this, I AM going to post the backing for my comments in my own self defense.
Says me. It's my opinion.
I'm a die-hard fan so I'll buy whatever. I'm not sure how many individual purchases tables like Fathom, Sea Witch and Comet will get from casuals who are used to Pinball FX and DMD tables.
I may be dead wrong.
This is highly anecdotal, but based on what I've seen the last few years at the Chicago Pinball Expo and the Midwest Gaming Classic, DMD games generate far more interest than older games. When it's busy, nearly every DMD table will have someone playing it and some even have lines 3-4 deep, but many of the older tables are wide open.
As someone who just got into pinball a few years ago, the newer tables ('90s onward) are mostly where my interests lie as well. But I've found some of the older ones can be surprisingly fun, too, especially as a good change of pace. I can appreciate the historical aspect and innovation they had for their time as well. But that still doesn't mean I'll spend as much time playing Gorgar as I will Attack from Mars.
At this point I'll buy any table available, but I can see where older ones just won't generate as much interest in general.
By the way, the line for Wizard of Oz at Expos is often 8+ people long. Newer/shinier will always attract more people more of the time. It's similar to other industries like cars, music or movies if you think about it. As time goes on, the best and most popular works (greatest hits) from past eras will maintain their popularity and find new generations of fans, but most will fade from memory. People are mostly interested in what's newer.
As an aside, the folks that go to pinball expos aren't exactly the mainstream of pinball players.
There are very few pinball machines to be found in the wild in Chicago