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- Path: menudo.uh.edu!usenet
- From: barrett@cs.umass.edu (Daniel Barrett)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Subject: REVIEW: Pinball Fantasies
- Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.games
- Date: 27 Apr 1993 01:07:40 GMT
- Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
- Lines: 281
- Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1ri10s$b38@menudo.uh.edu>
- Reply-To: barrett@cs.umass.edu (Daniel Barrett)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
- Keywords: game, arcade, pinball, simulation, commercial
-
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: This review was updated on May 10, 1993. - Dan]
-
- PRODUCT NAME
-
- Pinball Fantasies
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- This Amiga game is a pinball machine simulator. It is the sequel
- to Pinball Dreams, which I have not played.
-
-
- AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
-
- Name: Digital Illusions
- Distributed by 21st Century Entertainment, Ltd.
-
- US Address: 21st Century Entertainment, Inc.
- PO Box 415
- Webster, NY 14580
- USA
-
- UK Address: 21st Century Entertainment, Ltd.
- 568 Milton Pak
- Abingdon
-
- E-mail: andreas@gilbert.adsp.sub.org (Andreas Axelsson)
-
-
- LIST PRICE
-
- $49.95 (US). I paid $35.00 at a dealer, and I've seen it for as low
- as $26.00 in mailorder ads. (My dealer let me try out the game on an A3000T
- before buying it, so it was worth paying his higher price.)
-
- A freely distributable demo version is available on ftp sites like
- amiga.physik.unizh.ch and its mirrors (/pub/aminet/game/demo/pin_fan.lzh).
-
-
- SPECIAL HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
-
- HARDWARE
-
- If you use the hard disk installable version (see COPY
- PROTECTION, below), you need 4 MB of free hard disk space.
-
- The documentation does not list any hardware requirements
- nor compatibility information. However, it does NOT run
- correctly on my friend's Amiga 4000. (Supposedly the
- hard-disk-installable version runs correctly. See BUGS,
- below.) I recommend that users with 68040's or A1200's try
- out this game before buying it.
-
- SOFTWARE
-
- The documentation does not list any software requirements
- nor compatibility information.
-
-
- COPY PROTECTION
-
- Disk-based copy protection, requiring you to boot on the master
- disk. Scores are saved on the table disks. I hate copy protection, so
- this is annoying.
-
- A hard-drive-installable version is available from the company for
- an additional $10.00 (US) and the return of all three Pinball Fantasies
- disks. This version takes over the machine but returns you to AmigaDOS when
- you're finished playing. It also has "look up the word in the manual" copy
- protection.
-
-
- MACHINE USED FOR TESTING
-
- Amiga 3000T, 2 MB Chip RAM, 8 MB Fast RAM, Quantum 210MB hard drive.
- Kickstart 2.04, Workbench 2.1.
-
-
- REVIEW
-
- About 12 years ago, when I was on vacation with my family, I
- discovered a pinball video game in our hotel lobby. This monochrome game
- used solid rectangles for bumpers and a tiny square (yes, a square) for the
- ball. The ball moved at a constant speed, and the only sound it made was a
- pathetic "bloop." It was closer to "Pong" than pinball, really, but much
- less fun than Pong. My Dad and I played a few games and then decided that
- computer pinball was a stupid idea. Only the real thing could be fun.
-
- 12 years later, Dad and I were proved wrong. VERY wrong.
-
- Pinball Fantasies (PBF) is a pinball machine simulator. I had
- serious doubts about this game, but then I made the "mistake" of trying it
- out at my local Amiga dealer. I say "mistake" because now I am TOTALLY
- addicted to the BEST arcade game I have played since Arkanoid!!
-
- The game comes on three floppy disks: one master game disk, and two
- "table" disks, each containing two different pinball machines. The four
- available tables are Partyland (a circus theme), Speed Devils (racing cars
- theme), Billion Dollar Gameshow (TV game show theme), and Stones 'n' Bones
- (haunted house theme). Each has different graphics, music, sound effects,
- and scoring. Rumor has it that new table discs will be released by the
- company. As I played each table for the first time, I had the same
- thought: "The previous table was more fun than this one." However, after a
- few games on the new table, I changed my mind! All of the tables are fun in
- different ways. At first, I was disappointed that the tables are not very
- large, but I was too hasty -- there is plenty to do on each table.
- (Including at least one secret entrance!)
-
- To play the game, you must boot on the master disk. A short
- introduction follows, which cannot be skipped. After about 1 minute (on my
- 68030), you are asked to insert a table disk. About 30 seconds later, you
- may choose between the two tables on the disk by pressing F1 or F2. 30
- seconds later, you are ready to play. Press F1 through F8 to start a game
- with 1-8 players. Flippers are controlled by the left/right SHIFT, ALT, and
- AMIGA keys which all function identically. Shooting the ball is done either
- with the "down arrow" key or the mouse, and the table may be bumped by
- pressing the space bar. (Yes, if you press the space bar too often, you
- will "tilt" the machine and lose your current ball.)
-
- The screen is split into two parts. At the top, there is a display
- which shows your score and various messages. This display simulates a
- 2-dimensional grid of "lightbulbs" like the scoreboard at a baseball game,
- and it is used very effectively both during gameplay and between games.
- Below that, and taking up most of the screen, is the pinball machine itself.
- The whole table cannot fit on the screen, so it scrolls vertically while you
- play, always keeping the ball in view. The scrolling is VERY smooth and
- fast.
-
- Gameplay is dynamic and fun. Unlike that awful video game I played
- 12 years ago, PBF's ball moves naturally at different speeds depending on
- what it hits. The flipper response is VERY realistic, and I have no trouble
- at all using the flippers to delay and stop the ball. Also, the ball falls
- down chutes and bounces off bumpers so naturally that it's easy to forget
- you are playing a computer game.
-
- I like the music and sound effects very much; in particular, the
- music matches the "theme" of each table very effectively. For example, on
- "Speed Devils", some of the "instruments" are automobile sounds (ignition,
- motor, crashing) used musically. The sound effects and music change
- appropriately and add to the excitement of the game. Some sounds are
- realistic, like the the ball being queued up at the beginning, and others
- are intentionally unrealistic. The music may be toggled on and off, but
- sound effects stay on all the time. The only sound missing from the game is
- the rolling of the ball. But this is understandable since the sound would
- have to be "looped" (repeated) to be continuous and would probably sound
- artificial.
-
- In some ways, PBF is "larger than life," having features I have not
- seen on real pinball machines, and this makes the play even more exciting.
- First of all, the scoring is set higher than on the real pinball machines I
- have used. There's something exhilarating about scoring 40 million
- points!! Second, the "lightbulb" display reminds you of bonuses at
- appropriate times. For example, if you hit a particular target 10 times,
- you get an extra ball; so each time you hit it, PBF displays "4 MORE TIMES
- FOR EXTRA BALL" or a similar message. Another example (in "Party Time") is
- a target that must be hit after knocking down 3 ducks. If you hit the
- target too early, the display flashes, "HIT SOME DUCKS FIRST." Cute and
- useful. (Disclaimer: maybe nowadays, real pinball machines do this too.
- I don't know. It's been a few years since I played pinball.)
-
- In contrast, PBF is also slightly easier than real pinball in some
- ways. First, it's easier to prevent the ball from slipping between your
- flippers; there is usually some way to hit it. Second, there is a little
- bit less randomness in the ball's path (but only a *little*). If you hit
- the ball into a loop-the-loop, you know that it's not going to fall into the
- gutter afterwards. However, this does NOT detract from the game at all, and
- in fact I like the predictability sometimes.
-
-
- DOCUMENTATION
-
- The game comes with a small, 7-page manual with playing instructions
- and descriptions of the different tables and their scoring. It is adequate
- but not fancy. PBF is so easy to use that you don't need to read the manual
- before playing, thanks to the informative display and the natural keystrokes
- (SHIFT=flipper, etc.).
-
- However, if you do read the manual, you will discover how complex
- the game really can be! For example, in "Stones 'n Bones," you can score
- 5,000,000 points if you "shoot the CLEAR ramp to the ROLL-OVERS, drop down
- to the LEFT FLIPPER and hit the SCREAMS ramp and the far LEFT ramp." Once
- you are familiar with the many bonuses you can get, the game becomes even
- more fun.
-
- Some the terminology in the manual is not fully explained. In the
- previous 5,000,000-point example, the manual doesn't tell you what the
- "ROLL-OVERS" is! (Are?) But for the most part, it's understandable with a
- little study.
-
-
- LIKES AND DISLIKES
-
- My main like is the amazing realism of the game. More than once --
- and I am not making this up -- I have found myself shaking the keyboard in
- an attempt to tilt the machine, or *banging* the SHIFT keys to hit the ball
- harder. My mind gets swept away by the game, and my body takes over. All
- I can say is: I am IMPRESSED!!
-
- I have a few minor dislikes. The first few times I played, the
- vertical scrolling sometimes made me feel dizzy. It doesn't bother me
- any more, though. Some people will probably not be able to play this game
- for a prolonged period. Second, the messages in the "lightbulb" display
- sometimes scroll by too quickly for me to see them. If I lift my eyes from
- the table to watch the messages when they appear, I can't watch the ball.
-
- My only major dislike is the copy protection. I'm glad they offer a
- hard disk installable version, though I think asking an additional $10 for
- it is a ripoff. I should not have to pay extra money to replace missing
- functionality.
-
- My last dislike is that the manuals says to "disconnect all external
- hardware from the computer except the mouse and a second disk drive..."
- before playing the game. This is a completely ridiculous and unrealistic
- requirement for a game. These peripherals should not matter to a
- well-written program. Fortunately, the game runs fine on my system.
-
- One suggestion is that the rolling ball should make some kind of
- sound, if such a thing can be done effectively. When the music is turned
- off, the ball is unnaturally silent.
-
-
- COMPARISON TO OTHER SIMILAR PRODUCTS
-
- I have not used any similar products, except that awful video game
- 12 years ago. :-)
-
-
- BUGS
-
- The program crashed twice: both times while I was playing table #2,
- "Speed Devils." After a ball finished, a pair of large numbers got written
- in the "lightbulb display", one overlapping the other, and the program hung.
- (This problem has been verified by the programmer by e-mail.)
-
- The program does not run properly on the Amiga 4000. It will not
- even boot unless you use a program to remap Kickstart, such as ReloKick. And
- after it boots, the game is unplayable because it runs much too fast.
-
- However, the hard-disk-installable version of the game DOES run
- properly on the A4000, according to the vendor. I have not tested this.
-
-
- VENDOR SUPPORT
-
- I corresponded by e-mail with the programmer of the game, Andreas
- Axelsson, to ask about the crashing problem. He acknowledged the bugs and
- said he was looking for them, but said that "there will probably not be a new
- master [disk released], but maybe a 1200 version...."
-
- The manual states: "Our policy is one of constant improvement."
- Well, if this is true, I sure hope that a bugfixed version of PBF will be
- made available to registered owners!!
-
-
- WARRANTY
-
- None mentioned in the documentation.
-
-
- CONCLUSIONS
-
- I have complained a little bit, but don't be fooled: Pinball
- Fantasies is a FABULOUS game and an amazingly realistic pinball simulation.
- It has the makings of a real classic: simple concept, easy to use, and
- highly addictive. The only bad points are the copy protection and that it
- does not run properly on the A4000. I recommend this game without
- hesitation to all Amiga users who have extra time on their hands. :-)
-
-
- COPYRIGHT NOTICE
-
- Copyright 1993 Daniel J. Barrett. All rights reserved.
-
- Dan
-
- //////////////////////////////////////\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
- | Dan Barrett -- Dept of Computer Science, Lederle Graduate Research Center |
- | University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003 -- barrett@cs.umass.edu |
- \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\/////////////////////////////////////
-
- ---
-
- Daniel Barrett, Moderator, comp.sys.amiga.reviews
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-