![]() This usually takes time (between three to six months) as these games are becoming rarer and rarer and increasingly harder to find. You can choose from the games on our pages or alternatively contact us and commission us to find the game you want. We only deal in classic American games from the top manufactures including Bally, Williams and Gottlieb. We hold a stock of iconic pinball games from the 1950′s to the 70′s. Please have a look at the range of EM and Solid-State pinball machines we have to offer on the following pages. To let them experience the thrill of the ball launch, flippers, lights, sounds and glowing blackglass of a classic game. We also want to introduce the younger generations to tangible real pinball machines and guide them away from virtual (non) reality. Pinball Creative is all about bringing back nostalgic moments for those of you lucky enough to remember arcades jam packed full of pinball machines. We take immense pride in our work and only want our pinball tables and classic pinball machines to play as good if not better than when they left their factory. ![]() Our pinball machine restoration work has no comparisons. ![]() We also take commissions to find the perfect game for you >Īt Pinball Creative we take our restoration work seriously and there are no compromises in the parts we use and the time we take. I'm not using tinyurl or equiv because I want to make it clear it's actually TED as opposed to some malware link.We source our classic EM pinball games carefully: They are handpicked in Europe and fully refurbished in London. Entertaining and it'll cure her of that in 20 minutes flat. I think Mom should watch this Ted Talk by Dan Gilbert. Maybe if you start with the more/most expensive one you want, then the rest don't seem as bad. Her reasoning for be able to buy them so easily is that "well, they're a lot cheaper than TAF." If she had started with the cheaper ones, I doubt that she would have worked her way up to paying that much more for TAF being just 1 machine when she could see what else she could get for the same money. (Granted, it is gorgeous and flawless, and I heard multiple times "If I'm getting one, I'm getting a NICE one.") Since then, she's bought RFM, MSF, PM, and Flintstones. Then she found one elsewhere at 2/3rds of the retail price and thought it was a "deal" at around $6K shipped. She saw other machines cheaper, but that's the one she wanted. We went to the local retail store where they of course had high retail prices. I'm not sure if Bride of PinBot still falls into that price range, but I'd put that in there as well. Other options I'd throw in there are High Speed and F-14 Tomcat both of those are designed by Steve Ritchie and play pretty fast. Of the two, I personally prefer PinBot, but either is good. T2 is an awesome "hit the ball around" game, and that's exactly why I have it (I don't have to explain rules to guests we can just play). Of all of them, PinBot holds up REALLY well for its age. Flash is on the lower end, but if you wanted an immaculate one, I'm guessing they're out there and someone would charge $1,500 for it. ![]() Pin*Bot would put you somewhere in the middle of your price range, depending on the market, and T2 would probably toe a bit higher. Now that I have those more expensive games, the cheaper ones that still hold up are Terminator 2, Pin*Bot, and Flash. If nothing else, based upon how people talk about games, I have some games that other people regard reasonably highly, games that fall into the higher end of the price range. I'm not trying to boast, but I think I have a pretty reasonable collection. ![]()
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