Pinball 2000

Pinball 2000 was the last pinball hardware and software platform developed by major pinball manufacturer Williams, and was used in the machines Revenge From Mars (under the brand name Bally) and Star Wars Episode I (under the brand name Williams) before Williams exited the pinball business on October 25, 1999. It is the successor to the Williams Pinball Controller platform.

Unlike previous pinball machines, Pinball 2000 machines feature a computer monitor to display animations, scores, and other information. The player perceives this video to be integrated with the playfield, due to a mirrored playfield glass (utilizing an illusion called "Pepper's Ghost") that reflects the monitor hung in the head of the machine.[1] This allows the display of virtual game targets in the playfield's upper third that can be "hit" by the machine's physical steel ball. "Impacts" on these targets are detected by physical targets in the middle of the playfield, and by recognizing successful shots up the left and right ramps and orbits/loops.

This innovative integration of pinball and video was inspired by the Asteroids Deluxe arcade machine,[2] which used a one-way mirror to add a static background graphic to the game's animated vector graphics.

Revenge from Mars, the first of the two released games, sold a promising 6,878 units. However, Star Wars Episode I suffered from a rushed and top-secret production cycle and sold only about half as many units (3,525), leading to Williams' decision to close down its historic pinball division.

Technical details

Games

Released

Planned (unreleased)

Trivia

References

  1. Rubens, Paul (1 June 2014). "Pinball 2000 – back from the grave?". Pavlovpinball.com. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  2. TILT: The Battle to Save Pinball (DVD documentary film). . Special features: Interview with Tom Uban.
  3. Haase, Enver. "VaaPin - Vaadin interface to Williams/Bally Pinball 2000 machines. Play physical pinball remotely.". Retrieved 13 January 2016.
  • Schelberg, Jim (January 15, 2009). "Wizard Blocks: A Snapshot in Time". PinGame Journal (83/84). 
  • Schelberg, Jim (2004). "The WMS Playboy Story". PinGame Journal. 
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