The Pinball Arcade is a pinball video game developed by FarSight Studios. The game is a simulated collection of 100 real pinball tables licensed by Gottlieb, Alvin G. and Company, and Stern Pinball, a company which also owns the rights of machines from Data East and Sega Pinball. Williams and Bally games are no longer available since June 30, 2018, as FarSight had lost the license to WMS properties, which has since passed to Zen Studios.

Tables are available for free limited demo play on Android, iOS, and other platforms. Every month, along with the release of downloadable content (DLC), four select tables on mobile versions are free with no Pro Menu features. PC versions are limited to one free table.


Pinball Arcade Tables Download


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The Pinball Arcade is developed by FarSight Studios, who also developed Pinball Hall of Fame: The Gottlieb Collection and Pinball Hall of Fame: The Williams Collection that were published by Crave Entertainment.[1] Four tables were available initially with the game's launch: Black Hole, Ripley's Believe It or Not!, Tales of the Arabian Nights, and Theatre of Magic.[2]

FarSight Studios took part in the Steam Greenlight program to distribute The Pinball Arcade for Windows-based personal computers.[3] The game was successfully Greenlit on April 18, 2013.[4] From August until October 2013, the PC version of The Pinball Arcade was in beta-testing. The Windows version of Pinball Arcade was released on November 4, 2013, along with the first 19 table packs. A Macintosh version of the Steam release was released on December 16, 2013. Although tables have to be purchased for each platform separately FarSight buyers of the Steam version are able to play their tables on OS X and Windows.[5]

The option to buy a season pass for an entire season, including unreleased tables in advance, was cancelled in February 2014 on the Mac App Store due to violation of Apple's policies that do not allow sales of unreleased software.[6]

Besides recreations of existing pinball machines, FarSight is also producing its own original-design tables.[8] A Ghostbusters-themed table was released in late October 2014 as a stand-alone application for Android and iOS using the same layout as Haunted House.[9][10]

On December 9, 2016, FarSight Studios announced Arcooda Pinball Arcade in cooperation with Arcooda, an Australian manufacturer of arcade and gaming machines. The game is an enhanced version of The Pinball Arcade running in a cabinet.[12]

Bally and Williams tables are no longer available for purchase following their non-renewal by the rights holders. The tables may still be played by those who already own them, but they can no longer be purchased as of June 30, 2018.[13] Zen Studios currently holds the rights to develop digital versions of such licensed tables.

Pinball Arcade was released on Xbox 360 via the Xbox Live Marketplace on April 4, 2012, but was discontinued in July 2013 due to the bankruptcy of publisher Crave Entertainment, combined with Microsoft's then strict publishing guidelines on Xbox Live.[14] The bankruptcy led FarSight Studios to only add the game's first 10 tables until the discontinuation. FarSight hoped for some legal resolution and hoped to add more content.[14]

The Nintendo Switch version was announced on December 23, 2017, to popular demand. While the game was released as intended on April 6, 2018, it was removed from the North American Nintendo eShop that same day due to issues regarding at least one license. It was reintroduced to the Nintendo eShop on May 11, 2018, lacking all Williams/Bally content and included only 36 tables in DLC packs.

Tables were previously available in season packs and pro packs allowing players to buy all tables of a season at once. Since the loss of the Bally/Williams license, tables are available in manufacturer packs with other manufacturers, such as Gottlieb/Premier, being split into multiple packs. Although tables are not necessarily released to all platforms and/or regions simultaneously, there are currently 101 published tables.[22] (including The Addams Family: Gold Edition and Williams/Bally games.)

In late October 2012, FarSight began to release "Pro Menu" upgrades for previously released tables. The upgrade lets the player control the camera to look around the table, control the ball, learn tips from pro players, and view the coin door and use the operator's menu. For Scared Stiff, it also grants the ability to turn off family mode with an uncensored voice-over. Pro Menus are not available on all tables due to the lack of features that didn't exist on the actual tables.

On May 7, 2018, the company confirmed it had lost its longstanding licenses for tables reproduced from Bally and Williams. It was announced that they would no longer be offered for sale after June 30, but they were actually still available through at least July 6, 2018. Customers who purchased any of these tables prior to the deadline will still be able to play them, and FarSight will continue to support them.[23]

FarSight's most recent Kickstarter project launched on May 2, 2016 with plans to digitize Stern's AC/DC pinball table for Stern Pinball Arcade; the announced funding goal was $108,435.[29] Due to a new partnership as a response of the positive reception, this Kickstarter was canceled as the intended funding was no longer necessary.[30] However, as of July 1, 2019, the license has expired and the table is no longer available for purchase.

For some legal and licensing reasons, certain tables had to be modified. Some examples include alterations to key table art assets, removal of certain code, and omissions of some music. This also went as far as radical redesigning. Some examples include the removal of Christopher Lloyd's likeness in The Addams Family, the omission of SEGA and Data East logos and references on 1990s Stern tables, and the conversion of World Cup Soccer to World Champion Soccer and the removal of all references to the World Cup USA94 brand.

I kept hearing people talk about the floaty physics of Pinball Arcade, but it honestly just feels so much more fluid than FX3 and there was such a better assortment of tables. It really sucks for us, the consumers, to have to pony up twice as much (the Pinball Arcade packs would go on sale a lot and were already 2 tables for $5 as opposed to 3 for $10 or even 2 for $10 or - God forbid - the ridiculous price of $15 for Indiana Jones) just because they all want more licensing fees.

Anyway, I have been using FX3 as of late and I really like all of the Pinball Arcade versions much more. This feels a little bit more like real pinball I guess, but the ball feels too heavy and sluggish like you're playing a table at one of those bars that has their machines lifted to the maximum amount of degrees so you get insta-ball drain and they can suck up your quarters (or loonies if you're in Canada). I wish there was a way to play cabinet mode on PS3 or PS4 where I already own all of these tables and more - is there?

So I am trying to use rocketlauncher as an emulator in LB to launch pinball arcade tables. In hyperspin it works flawlessly as the program will launch then rocketlaunch will scroll to the table you chose and launch it (AHK using correct number of keystrokes etc... )

Launch box requires roms to have an application path to the filename... so this wont work as the pinball arcade AHK module looks for properly named games like "Addams Family, The (Bally)' or 'Attack from Mars (Bally)'.

Honestly I'm a bit clueless when it comes to pinball at this point, but it is one of the few items left to tackle from the last community poll. So I will be looking at it very soon to come up with an easy solution.

Yes I got it working, you need to use rocketlauncher and have it setup properly there first. Coming from Hyperspin this was pretty easy, but if you are new to rocketlauncher there is a somewhat high learning curve. I personally have the non-steam version. First step importing Pinball Arcade into LB, default location for my set is 'Pinball Arcade\PC11\Resource'. All tables have extension of *.rez. Once all imported open Rocketlauncher UI and setup LB as your default front end. Once that is done RLUI will load any LB system xml's you have setup. Go to Pinball Arcade and set default emulator to the executable, choose pinball arcade module. Test games by using game audit and selecting a table. RL will press enter a couple of times to get to table selection and scroll to the correct table and launch it. Now there may be a lot more to this depending on what version PA you have and might need to setup the module in the correct order of your table names etc. RL forums covered this awhile ago... metalzoic I believe.

Thanks for sharing, wish I knew about this awhile ago.. looks like it is a free roaming camera mod NoEx created to view tables at any angle. But apparently it will allow table selection from what you are saying. I will try it out sometime. I'm sure someone else will find this useful as well. Only other system I use RL for, so far, is OpenBor. If there is a simpler way please share!

If you're a fan of the Bally/Williams' golden age of pinball machines, you might want to act fast to secure some great emulated facsimiles of some of the era's best tables. The Pinball Arcade has announced that the license holder for 61 Bally/Midway titles that make up the heart of the collection has declined to renew its contract. After June 30, you will no longer be able to buy those tables inside the game, though existing owners will continue to be able to play the tables, and they will still receive support, meaning there's no reason not to grab the ones you want before they're gone. ff782bc1db

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