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Other Zen Pinball Games & General Discussion
What happens with Zen's designers?
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<blockquote data-quote="shutyertrap" data-source="post: 278020" data-attributes="member: 134"><p>In one of the interviews Mel did this past week, he mentioned that most of these guys in Budapest grew up under Soviet rule, didn't get a chance to experience most of these machines when young, and so it's incredibly exciting for them to do so now. I imagine it'd kind of be like a car designer getting to restore a classic car. No, you don't get to put your own creative designs in but you do get to closely study all the components and visual flare that made it become a classic in the first place. You see a stripped down pinball playfield and it's so much different than you think. You start examining all the ways in which toys and under field ball troughs work, it's going to instruct future design. If anything I think Zen originals are only going to get better because of this.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="shutyertrap, post: 278020, member: 134"] In one of the interviews Mel did this past week, he mentioned that most of these guys in Budapest grew up under Soviet rule, didn't get a chance to experience most of these machines when young, and so it's incredibly exciting for them to do so now. I imagine it'd kind of be like a car designer getting to restore a classic car. No, you don't get to put your own creative designs in but you do get to closely study all the components and visual flare that made it become a classic in the first place. You see a stripped down pinball playfield and it's so much different than you think. You start examining all the ways in which toys and under field ball troughs work, it's going to instruct future design. If anything I think Zen originals are only going to get better because of this. [/QUOTE]
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What happens with Zen's designers?
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