But, instead we get Pat Lawlor’s odd-ball (possibly half-assed) golf table thrown in with Cirqus Voltaire and Tales of the Arabian Nights.
Yes, fiend, because I’ll steal more balls than Ralph’s Discount Pet Neutering.Īnyway, Zen could have just as easily swapped out No Good Gofers for Theatre of Magic in Volume 3 and made Volume 5 the three most famous works of Popadiuk. Want to hear a joke? What do pinball fans who give thousands of dollars to garage engineers for custom pinball tables and get shafted desire to do? Pop a dick. Two of today’s three tables are the works of John Popadiuk. The really strange thing is how there’s seemingly no rhyme or reason to which tables Zen packs together. Honestly, as long as we get them, I don’t care how it happens. I expect we’ll probably soon be paying $14.99 for sets of three, or $4.99 for individually-released licensed tables. Or if more people buy these sets enough to justify the licensing costs, so we can get Twilight Zone, Addams Family, and more. Of course, if they can tap into the extensive Williams/Bally alpha-numeric display library, they’ll have a LOT more classic pinball machines to pool from. In fact, following the release of Williams Pinball Volume 5, they’re down to three such tables: WHO Dunnit, Jack*Bot, and Cactus Canyon. Zen Studios is running out of Williams/Bally dot matrix display tables they can convert for Pinball FX 3.