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Farsight Studios
The Pinball Arcade / Farsight Studios
Which tables are worth buying
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<blockquote data-quote="Matt McIrvin" data-source="post: 25267" data-attributes="member: 590"><p>I got hooked on those 1970s/80s solid-state pins by PHoF: The Williams Collection on the Wii, which didn't have any tables that required emulation (so no DMDs; the most complex tables featured were scripted versions of Funhouse and Whirlwind).</p><p></p><p>I think a player relatively new to pinball might actually prefer these older tables. The games are short, but it's relatively easy to learn what you're supposed to be doing. As I've said elsewhere, I thought of Firepower as a sort of training ground, because it was just about the simplest table you could imagine that had all the gameplay features people came to expect from solid-state pinball after 1980.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Matt McIrvin, post: 25267, member: 590"] I got hooked on those 1970s/80s solid-state pins by PHoF: The Williams Collection on the Wii, which didn't have any tables that required emulation (so no DMDs; the most complex tables featured were scripted versions of Funhouse and Whirlwind). I think a player relatively new to pinball might actually prefer these older tables. The games are short, but it's relatively easy to learn what you're supposed to be doing. As I've said elsewhere, I thought of Firepower as a sort of training ground, because it was just about the simplest table you could imagine that had all the gameplay features people came to expect from solid-state pinball after 1980. [/QUOTE]
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The Pinball Arcade / Farsight Studios
Which tables are worth buying
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