![]() ![]() I never got close to finishing it though I choose to believe I was probably the first one outside of Cunning to finish Timeshock.įJ… This one seemed rushed to me or something. A competent game, but one that I did not enjoy playing. It seemed hard, probably went more brutally hardcore rulewise than did Timeshock, didn’t shoot as well (to me), and just simply lacked fun. Really loved a lot of the more imaginative things they did like the souvenir matches which I thought was a really great rule.īRUSA fell completely flat to me. To me it seems impossible to “get” by casuals, but I have no evidence one way or the other. Timeshock honestly to me lacks in music and speech, but the rules are so good it’s hard to hate the game for those things. It was BTFO by Timeshock, though, truly the pinnacle of the series. It was really the first video pinball with serious hardcore pinball rules. Biggest bummer was unlabeled inserts, but I guess you got used to it pretty quick. I really liked it, and it just kind of grew onto me as I played it, after reading about the mixed reception by critics.) What’s everyone’s take on the series, if any? (Oddly enough, I grew up with Fantastic Journey as my first table throughout my younger years. They’ve yet to do DMDs, motion blurring, and more refined physics than that of FJ and BRUSA.) (Currently, all the camera views are in, as well as cabinet support. The quality is astounding, even though it takes a long time for the additional features and tables to be finished. They’re probably not even aware that the Timeshock is graphically (and soon, physically) remastered by the very same development team. Pro Pinball sold 3 million copies in the 1990s, and the odds of people remembering the game(s) are very low. ![]() Point #2 is probably more on the nostalgia factor. Whereas Pro Pinball Ultra, on Steam, is $15 for just Timeshock, and that may seem off-setting for some. It might just be that most just want to go for products available with a “cheap” price tag ($30 for 10-20 tables is a steal, even more so on a major sale). ![]() 70+ games in each title, free to try out, and very cheap to afford multiple tables, bundled or not. It might be that both Pinball Arcade and Zen have much more to offer than said series. They’re both great games to play, but I just don’t get why Pro Pinball seems so underrated. It just baffles me as to why these games (The Web, Timeshock, Big Race USA, and Fantastic Journey) never receive as much credit in digital pinball as, say, Pinball Arcade or Zen Pinball. ![]()
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