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Pinball Is Dying – Part 2: Bally/Williams
Episode 20

Pinball Is Dying – Part 2: Bally/Williams

Want to Support the Show? Visit our Patreon at www.patreon.com/silverballchronicles Or pick up a tee shirt at https://tinyurl.com/kz5xt4hc Episode Summary: The '90s saw the biggest leap in pinball mechanics and technology that the hobby had ever seen. The Dot Matrix Display and how Bally/Williams leveraged it made the pins from the previous decade look like a horse and buggy. The purchase of Bally by Williams created a competitive shark tank, forcing designers and engineers to continuously one-up each other. But as the 90s marched on, the industry contracted. Designers exited or moved on to other areas, and junior designers took their place and built some of the best machines Bally/Williams had produced, but sadly, the sales numbers didn't reflect that. Ron and Dave chat all about the final years of Bally/Williams including Adam Rhine's Dot Animation, Congo's amazing shot layout, J-Pop, Attack From Mars, Dave saying 'spider' correctly after listening while editing, George Gomez giving a poetic definition of 'Flow', Chicago Gaming Company Remakes, and can the magic of Bally/Williams be replicated? Source: Pinside at Pinside.com WMS- IGT Settlement Agreement. Here. This Week in Pinball – George Gomez, Armed and Dangerous. Here. TOPCast Pinball Show: #10 John Trudeau, #63 Keith Johnson, #40 George Gomez, #28 Adam Rhine Shalhoub, Michael (2004). The Pinball compendium: 1982 to Present. Schiffer Publishing, Lt. Here

Silverball Chronicles (TPN) - Pinball

January 5, 20222h 4m

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Show Notes

Want to Support the Show?

Visit our Patreon at www.patreon.com/silverballchronicles

Or pick up a tee shirt at https://tinyurl.com/kz5xt4hc

Episode Summary:

The '90s saw the biggest leap in pinball mechanics and technology that the hobby had ever seen. The Dot Matrix Display and how Bally/Williams leveraged it made the pins from the previous decade look like a horse and buggy. The purchase of Bally by Williams created a competitive shark tank, forcing designers and engineers to continuously one-up each other.

But as the 90s marched on, the industry contracted. Designers exited or moved on to other areas, and junior designers took their place and built some of the best machines Bally/Williams had produced, but sadly, the sales numbers didn't reflect that.

Ron and Dave chat all about the final years of Bally/Williams including Adam Rhine's Dot Animation, Congo's amazing shot layout, J-Pop, Attack From Mars, Dave saying 'spider' correctly after listening while editing, George Gomez giving a poetic definition of 'Flow', Chicago Gaming Company Remakes, and can the magic of Bally/Williams be replicated?

Source:

Pinside at Pinside.com

WMS- IGT Settlement Agreement. Here.

This Week in Pinball – George Gomez, Armed and Dangerous. Here.

TOPCast Pinball Show: #10 John Trudeau, #63 Keith Johnson, #40 George Gomez, #28 Adam Rhine

Shalhoub, Michael (2004). The Pinball compendium: 1982 to Present. Schiffer Publishing, Lt. Here