I intentionally avoided mentioning competitive play and that seems to be an underlying tone here. That is an entirely different animal.
I really could care less about games being exploitive, formulaic or unbalanced like TAF or DW or JM. These three, as an example, got a lot of play from me back in the early 90s. TAF still ranks as one of my all time favourites, period. "SHOWTIME!", "So it can kill you.", "The Mamuska"... that game is so immersive and creates one of the best atmospheres in pinball play. What I was trying to say is that after playing so much of a particular game (I surely played over 100 games of TAF on location) that a game will get repetitive and all that's left is upping your score. Maybe I just played too much ?!... But I can honestly say I totally loved playing Dr Dude, Hook, LW3 - games you rarely see in competition.
Early last year I realized my collection of pins sat for weeks at a time, unplayed, untouched. All I did was clean the dust off the glass once in a while. So, after some convincing I made a decision to get into regular league play and rekindle the spark. It worked. I started playing
every Monday, made new friends, viewed a variety of collections, and saw games that took me back to when I was a teen. Pinball was back baby!!
But that lead me to discover something about competitive play. It happened in league play on occasion, but was more apparent in the Papa tutorial videos and tournament gameplay footage fellow pinheads told me about:
players would consistently cradle balls during multiball, hold two balls on one flipper, and play only with the third.
:shock: I cried foul. "Blasphemy!", I yelled. "That's not playing pinball". I didn't think it was. In the spirit of pinball, I still don't think it is. No doubt it's part of the purely strategic, points oriented,
you've got one game to make it count approach. I totally understand it, and I see why modes that don't score much are not pursued, and unbalanced scoring would be exploited. In competition you rarely get a second chance and gameplay has to be adjusted for this. After all, major pinball tournaments track points; the most points wins, and takes home the cash.
To each his own.
You can play for fun, or play for high scores. I say you can do both, esp. at home. To be competitive at qualifying tournaments and play towards achieving IFPA rankings, I suppose in order to qualify for world championships... this I don't see as the same thing I used to do in the pinball arcades.
I didn't mean to hijack the purpose of this thread. I'm pretty sure Warlock will expand on his recent revelation (and this subject) in another.