Pinball Fantasies
Description official descriptions
After the success of Pinball Dreams on several systems, a sequel featuring four new tables was created. The gameplay is much the same as the first game, with realistic physics, multi-player options and a high score table to aim for. The tables are Partyland, Speed Devils, Billion Dollar Gameshow and Stones 'n' Bones, taking in a funfair, racing cars, a tacky game-show, and a graveyard. Each one has a range of ramps, combos, light sequences and targets to shoot, as well as general themes which are less influenced by real tables than those in Pinball Dreams.
Spellings
- ピンボールファンタジーズデラックス - Japanese PSX spelling
Groups +
Screenshots
Promos
Credits (Amiga version)
7 People
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Reviews
Critics
Average score: 79% (based on 49 ratings)
Players
Average score: 3.8 out of 5 (based on 138 ratings with 4 reviews)
The Good
4 pinball tables, ball and flipper movings are well simulated.
Partyland is my prefered table. I like also stones n bones.
The Bad
Billion dollar and speed devils tables are with less interest.
The Bottom Line
If you like older pinball games, then take it.
DOS · by alain martinaut (1) · 2004
Perfect conversion of a perfect game, this is the best pinball EVER.
The Good
Damn, I was just about to add this game... ah well, you win some you lose some :-)
Pinball Fantasies rules the Earth! Indeed a perfection conversion of an Amiga classic, this game is simply the best pinball simulator there is. As a sequel to the classic Amiga Pinball Dreams, this game simply adds greatness to greatness, bringing the level of gameplay to perfection.
The music in this game is simply the best you will ever hear, even better than the one in Pinball Dreams, a masterpiece by Olof Gustaffson. The graphics are simply amazing - especially considering the time it came out, perfectly convereted from the AGA version of the game on the Amiga. The physics model is the best I've ever seen, even from newer pinball games (such as Extreme Pinball) and the tables are AMAZING, each and every one of them, yesiree!
This is a perfect game, which could not have been done better. The conversion, which was done by the demo group The Space Pigs, is as perfect as they get, the best conversion of any game from the Amiga I've ever seen. It's perfect, runs 100% smooth on a 386 with a complex physics model and digital music - what more is there to ask?
The Bad
Nothing! Best pinball ever, and a great conversion!
The Bottom Line
A truly magnificent game, one of the few I would truly call perfect. There are no caveats in this one, and I've been in love with it ever since I first played it.
DOS · by Tomer Gabel (4534) · 1999
The ultimate pinball simulation.
The Good
The physics model is incredible - this game feels so much like the real thing - only its better - since you don't have to pay to play it...
The graphics are well drawn, and realistic when compared to what was feasible at the time.
The digital music is well composed and adds much to the game's atmosphere.
But this is not important.
What is important is the gameplay. And tha gameplay rocks. This is the best PC pinball game I have EVER seen, far better than any game before it and better than modern games too. The tables are well designed, and hold many interesting suprises. There are only four tables - but they made each one count. The physics model is very good - and the ball responds as expected.
The game routines are very fast - the game runs at high resoltions with no speed losses on a 486 without problems.
The Bad
Only four tables...
The graphics is too flashy, too colorfull for my taste. A more metallic look would have been more fitting for a pinball game.
The Bottom Line
A great pinball game, that gives you the feeling that you are playing on a real machine.
DOS · by Mickey Gabel (332) · 2000
Discussion
Subject | By | Date |
---|---|---|
PlayStation version | Lance Boyle (1532) | Oct 4, 2016 |
Trivia
Attract mode
During each pinball table's attract mode, you can type words to get messages or enable/disable certain features. One such word is "credits", which will list the credits of the people who made and ported the game. Another word will turn the LED display into a scrolly, with a message out to all of Frontline Designs' demoscene friends.
Copy Protection
The PC DOS version has probably the worst copy protection ever. You have to enter a word from the manual, but you have unlimited tries! And word, line, and page won't even change after a wrong answer has been given. But this is moot anyway, since the pinball tables are separate executables. You can simply rename any of the tables (TABLE1.PRG to TABLE4.PRG) to INTRO.PRG and start the game as normal - bypassing the copy protection completely.
Release history
Party Land, Speed Devils, Billion Dollar (aka Billion Dollar Gameshow), and Stones -n- Bones were first released as Pinball Fantasies and later joined by the four tables of Pinball Mania and rereleased as Pinball Fantasies Deluxe. Then, in late 1996, 21st Century repackaged twenty of their tables, including Pinball Fantasies, as Pinball Gold.
-- excerpt taken from Erik Mooney's FAQ, Rules Sheet and Strategy Guide to Pinball Fantasies
Sales
After its release, the game went up to number one in the "All Formats Top-40" chart in England and has, as of 2004, sold more than 170,000 copies.
Version differences
When playing on the PSP, pressing Select makes the screen turn 90 degrees, so that you can play the game while holding the PSP in a vertical position.
Awards
- Amiga Joker
- Issue 02/1993 – #2 Readers' Special Price for 1992
- PC Gamer
- 1994 - Best Arcade Game
Information also contributed by B.L. Stryker, SonataFanatica and Trixter
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Identifiers +
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by IJan.
PlayStation 3 added by Picard. SNES added by B.L. Stryker. iPhone added by Vesuri. PSP added by karttu. PS Vita added by Alaka. Amiga CD32, MeeGo added by Kabushi. Amiga added by Terok Nor. PlayStation added by Parf. Jaguar added by quizzley7. Game Boy added by Shawn Gwinn.
Additional contributors: Timo W., Parf, Vesuri, Patrick Bregger, mailmanppa.
Game added December 15, 1999. Last modified November 8, 2024.