Flipper Pinball was designed by Jeff Corsiglia and coded by
Mark Indictor in 1983. This game is also known as Spinball in the U.S.
but both games play the same apart from having a different
overlay, front-page of instruction page, cart label and title on
the box. As a matter of fact even Flipper pronounces 'Spinball'
on the games title screen, a mistake in translation perhaps.
One feature of Flipper, which is lacking in many other Vectrex
games, is a pause button. Simply pressing button '1' during play
freezes the action which can be handy when a friend drops by or
something interesting appears on TV. Scoring is a problem in
Flipper as the score is not displayed during the game which can
get kind of irritating not knowing how you are progressing, and
I'm not sure if US Spinball suffers from the same problem.
Over the years videogame pinball has showed up on various
platforms and with varying amounts of success. Bumper Bash
(1983), Midnight magic (1988 Atari) and Intellivision Pinball
(1983) are all quite well known releases which have been enjoyed
by gamers over the years.
Various bells and whistles appear on Flipper including, Centre
Chute Diamonds, Six-sided Bumpers, Spinners, Drop Targets, Ball
Splitter, Ball Savers and Glassies. And at stages you can have at
least two balls playing on the screen at one time which adds up
to pinball frenzy.
Flipper even has a 'tilt' function just like a regular arcade
pinball machine. Flipper does have it's problems for the gamer
however. For starters the distance between each flipper is way to
big and on numerous occasions I found myself getting frustrated
with how many balls I was loosing for such a little score. The
table is extremely balanced though and with some perseverance the
gamer can have a fun game of pinball if a little on the tedious
side. The ball tends to stay in the top-half of the screen for a
large amount of time and then when it makes it to the bottom
straight through the middle of the flippers it goes. Going
sometimes on ebay for $35.
Score 5/10
Review written by Daniel Foot
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