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Other Zen Pinball Games & General Discussion
First Numeric Table Speculation
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<blockquote data-quote="shutyertrap" data-source="post: 287536" data-attributes="member: 134"><p>At the Museum of Pinball in Banning, CA they have a bunch of these oddball Bally machines. Though few really stick out (no doubt they cranked out a bunch of mediocre stuff), they do offer a nice alternative to the better known stuff, a sort of cleansing of the palette that lets you admire once more the good stuff. It's kind of why I wanted Swords of Fury in TPA, if for nothing else than an odd layout. I'm gonna have to look at photos of all of them on IPDB.org to even remember which I've played, as a lot of the titles sound familiar but I'm just not sure.</p><p></p><p>If Zen were to do any of these, it'd be critical that they replicated the flipper and slings strength. These things feel very underpowered in comparison to Williams of the same time period. And especially with those widebodies, because those play s-l-o-w. Obviously the two companies were not sharing many parts yet, and the flipper mechanics were certainly different.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="shutyertrap, post: 287536, member: 134"] At the Museum of Pinball in Banning, CA they have a bunch of these oddball Bally machines. Though few really stick out (no doubt they cranked out a bunch of mediocre stuff), they do offer a nice alternative to the better known stuff, a sort of cleansing of the palette that lets you admire once more the good stuff. It's kind of why I wanted Swords of Fury in TPA, if for nothing else than an odd layout. I'm gonna have to look at photos of all of them on IPDB.org to even remember which I've played, as a lot of the titles sound familiar but I'm just not sure. If Zen were to do any of these, it'd be critical that they replicated the flipper and slings strength. These things feel very underpowered in comparison to Williams of the same time period. And especially with those widebodies, because those play s-l-o-w. Obviously the two companies were not sharing many parts yet, and the flipper mechanics were certainly different. [/QUOTE]
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