Let me save you some time if you were planning on going to Gary's seminar:
(Gary's talk in summary)
- He's been in the pinball business for 6X years (whatever his age is now)
- He can remember running around his Dad's factory when he was a kid
- His dad was friends with Harry Williams
- Chicago Coin was sold to Stern, Stern to Seeburg, Seeburg went under, Gary formed PinStar, which was bought by Data East, which was bought by Sega, Sega pulled out, Gary bought the company back and it became the Stern company we all know and love (or hate) today.
- Gary loves pinball, but they're a manufacturing company FIRST AND FOREMOST. As such, they need to take measures sometimes to stay afloat (ie. cost cutting)
- Gary loves music, movies and superheroes. That is the ONLY type of games you'll see from them.
- 40% sales to NA operators, 40% sales over-seas (which is why Family Guy flopped, they don't get that show there), 20% to home users (these numbers always change depending on when you ask him)
- Star Trek is the greatest thing to happen to pinball (and his favourite game, like Adam said)
- Question period starts, but he makes a point of saying EVERY TIME that he will not answer anything about upcoming titles or tech (ie. displays). So ask about past and present games only, to which we already know all the answers anyway.
This is pretty much the routine, and does this so often that he's actually starting to sound like a robot.
The end.
Actually, here's a quick one for Steve Ritchie while I'm at it:
- Quick story about the release of Black Knight, and how a horse shat on the stage during the presentation.
- A history of how High Speed came to be (spoiler: he got a speeding ticket driving a porsche)
- He loves working at Stern, the future holds plenty of great things, yadda yadda
- Question period -- this ALWAYS always always devolves into "What was it like working for B/W" .. until Gary gives him the evil eye, and then it turns into "What was your favourite game by XXXXX designer" for another 20 mins.
PS, speak up.. he's going deaf (for reals)
Your welcome.