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What got you into Pinball?

I have vague recollections of seeing pins in seaside arcades. Must have played a couple on family holidays to Blackpool but don't remember what they were. In my youth it was video games. I was lucky enough to have a father who was an electronics engineer at the dawn of computing so when most of my friends had Atari consoles I had an Apple. The early 80s led to my own Commodore 64 and more gaming, but my love was always for the arcade classics on holiday: Tempest, 1942, Battlezone, Asteroids, Galaxian, Galaga, Mr. Do, Bubble Bobble, Q*Bert, Space Invaders, Pac-Man, R-Type, Space Harrier, Gauntlet and Marble Madness to name but a few!

My obsession with pinball came much later. Much, much later. And it's all @Hiro996's fault! My wife is friends with his wife via our children being in the same class at school. Eventually, one day my wife say's "Did you know he's got a room full of pinball machines?" I did not!

Somehow I got helping @Hiro996 converting his double garage into a games room and eventually got to playing some pinball. This led to scouring eBay and nearly coming a cropper with "that lot" from Blackpool, but eventually bagged my PARAGON project in 2013. It ****ed the missus off no end but I told her it was all her fault for telling me the pins!
 
What got me into pinballl ....erh...

going on dirty weekends and holidays with my girl friend in llandduno!! in the 90s

girl friend is the wife:) = 25 years :eek:
 
Surprised to see how many people got into pinball via Pinball Arcade. Wonder what the demographics of the players on pinball arcade are. possibly older than I assumed.
 
I first played pinball as a young boy in the late 1960's and early 1970's in seaside arcades whilst on holiday. I was fascinated by the electric sparks that the EMs slingshots made, all the clicking and rotating score reels and the bright lights. Plus I could make my pocket money last longer on pinball rather than in the fruit machines. :)

As a teenager I saw the change from EM games to the first solid state machines. The pubs in my village first had EM pins such as Captain Fantastic, Williams Triple Strike, then later had SS games such as Gorgar, Silverball Mania, Harlem Globetrotters and Time Warp in the games rooms (I was still too young to buy a drink legally then).

By the early 1980's I had got married and pinball was totally forgotten about until the Spring of 2009. I was idly musing one quiet afternoon at work about things that I did as a teenager, remembering a pinball machine that had a triangle of rollovers (Triple Strike). I Googled this up, found IPDB, and the fact there was going to be a pinball show in Northampton with lots of of machines available to play. I walked into the show and I was hooked, the rest is history. :cool:
 
"It started with a KISS - never thought it would come to this"

"No No No" it was TAF - no not the welsh one (no offense) The Addams Family

I was like many others hooked on the video games - many that @Nedreud mentioned - the main family holiday destination of my youth was near Ilfracombe and we would visit Woolacombe on many a hot or not so hot day. My parents used to go nuts at the amount of time and money I'd spend in these houses of debauchery.

I do remember playing pinball, but cannot remember any of the names.

TAF was the one I remember playing when I was able to drive and drive I must - from the Lakes all the way to Blackpool to get my fix. For some reason I can remember playing a lot better then than I do now for some reason - maybe because I'm old and slow now?

I built a mame cocktail table, but never got round to finishing it. I then built a racing playseat simulator setup, complete with leather driving seat out of an old Scorpio, projector, and old scaffolding pipe with Xbox steering wheel and pedals, but never used it that much so sold it.

The man cave was not happening!

Then along comes TPA - wow - great - hours of fun

Then I thought - why don't I get one - a real one - as with others, straight to the bay - Oh! how much? This isn't going to happen.

As with everything I want to do, I did some research and hey presto - www.pinballinfo.com - great

Introduced myself and was welcome with open arms as everybody is and got invited to @RGV as I had a passion for TOM and his is a beauty!! Met @windosnot aswell given the pointers on buying my own put as always - low funds.

Then one day Mr PPi sent me a letter and that was that - Apollo 13 - VR TAFG and a dead EWF

Now in the process of putting a side door into the man cave (garage) - pallets, boards, carpet, plasterboard, LED lights etc - but that will be in another post.

Oh and my wife hates you all ;) ........not
 
Shamelessly copying from pinside cos I can't be ****d to type it all again :D

As a young man in his early 20's, many people have commented on my fascination with Pinball as a hobby. "Why?" seems to be the question that pops up the most, and it is probably the most difficult to answer as well. Most people of my generation and all my friends are more into video games, we were the generation that grew up with the very first playstation and the N64. Home gaming has always been the hobby of choice, oddly it is what lead me to Pinball in the first place.

It was late 2011, my father, a man of many professions had just retired. His previous job required that he move out of his house so he settled on the coast with his partner. A typical retirement town, 'White sticks and wheelchairs' is a favorite phrase my nan often uses to mock towns where people decide to retire to. I was just entering my 20's at the time, I had started my second job and finally had a bit of disposable income. I went down to visit him and decided to have a look around the town not knowing what was there. I found a comic shop which was great, a load of chippies (typical for a seaside town) and a few other places, not much of interest so I decided to walk down to the seafront. Recently I had started playing the old Space Cadet pinball game that came packaged with every Windows XP computer and wanted to find out if there was any real Pinballs to try, according to a website that archives Pinball locations, there was. 2 at the seafront where he lives, so I went looking for the arcade.

The seafront is pretty dilapidated, but there was 1 building open in a small block which had the word "AMUSEMENTS" glowing in neon in the window. I nearly walked right by, it looked pretty depressing, a boring white building with not much to entice anyone in. But then I remembered this was about the right spot for the arcade that the website had said I would find some real Pinballs in, so I went in.

In I walked, there was maybe 5 or 6 other patrons inside to the right, mostly playing the coin-pushers and one armed bandits. Boring. I went to look over the arcade games to the left of the entrance. There was a big Daytona USA cabinet, I remembered that game fondly from playing it years ago but had a look what else there was. A few more cabs with fighting games, the odd light gun games, pretty standard really. The UK doesn't have a huge amount of arcades anymore, let alone decent arcade games to play. And then I saw them, sitting in the corner. Turns out the location website was right, in front of me was a Terminator 2 and Theatre of Magic.

It was hard to decide which one to play first and what to do. I decided to opt for Terminator 2, I loved the film and this game seemed in pretty good shape. I remember putting that coin in and hitting the start button. That was it, this was going to be my hobby. I played both games until I had no more coins and I ran out of cash, I never even hit a highscore but I didn't care. I had played real Pinball and it was glorious. Sadly a few months later the machines were switched off, they still sit there to this day but they are now walled in behind a huge number of other dead arcade games. The operator won't let go, "We never sell anything here" were his words when I asked if he would be interested in selling me the two games. No idea why, but rumors talk of the arcade being a money laundering scheme which is why such a desolate arcade is always open, but for who? Nobody seemed to know.

And so it began, an hobby which has slowly turned almost into an obsession. I am still relatively new to this hobby but I am trying to learn all I can and am now 8 machines in and likely this will continue. I still love it. When I am asked "Why?" I try to explain it like this. "Video games are programmed, for the majority of them you might try to do something different but generally the outcome is the same, levels and games end in a set way. Pinball is always different, no 2 games are the same, sure the playfield never changes and neither do the rules but you could have 100 million games on a pinball machine and no 2 games will ever be alike. It's a total thrill and I love it."

Sometimes I wish I had seen the golden age(s) of Pinball, granted it isn't as big here in the UK as in the US but it still has a large following of avid fans and supporters. But things are looking up for the hobby, I am in it right at a point where new games seem to be being made and a huge explosion of interest has taken place, both from younger people like myself and older people who fondly remember the games they used to play in cafes and arcades many years ago. Perhaps we are looking at a new golden age of the hobby where it is making a comeback, and I'm so glad I'm here for it. Hopefully into the next golden age of pinball.

I might have missed it but.......what is this seaside town?
The other thing that makes pinball better than videos is it's a physical thing - the clunk when a drop target goes down or the ball drops in a hole.
 
I might have missed it but.......what is this seaside town?
The other thing that makes pinball better than videos is it's a physical thing - the clunk when a drop target goes down or the ball drops in a hole.

Bexhill-On-Sea, they were there around 3 years ago when my dad moved. I haven't been down in a while but last I saw the games was probably 6 months ago still walled up. Think they might have gone now though finally.
 
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