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Farsight Studios
The Pinball Arcade / Farsight Studios
Modern Pinballs from 1991-2012 prefered pls
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<blockquote data-quote="Matt McIrvin" data-source="post: 30021" data-attributes="member: 590"><p>Pinball Hall of Fame: The Gottlieb Collection had a bunch of electromechanical tables, so they've got some history with this. (The Williams Collection had only one, Jive Time, which was not a very good example of the genre, though the artwork was kind of cool.)</p><p></p><p>The pre-solid-state era, of course, has its own divisions: mechanical bagatelles, flipperless EMs, flipper woodrails and flipper steel-rails. Everything prior to the introduction of the standard flipper arrangement, with inward-facing flippers around the center drain, would seem very strange to a modern player, but I think there's room for some 1960s and 1970s electromechanical machines.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Matt McIrvin, post: 30021, member: 590"] Pinball Hall of Fame: The Gottlieb Collection had a bunch of electromechanical tables, so they've got some history with this. (The Williams Collection had only one, Jive Time, which was not a very good example of the genre, though the artwork was kind of cool.) The pre-solid-state era, of course, has its own divisions: mechanical bagatelles, flipperless EMs, flipper woodrails and flipper steel-rails. Everything prior to the introduction of the standard flipper arrangement, with inward-facing flippers around the center drain, would seem very strange to a modern player, but I think there's room for some 1960s and 1970s electromechanical machines. [/QUOTE]
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