Epic Pinball
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Epic Pinball | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Digital Extremes |
Publisher(s) | Epic MegaGames |
Designer(s) | James Schmalz Joe Hitchens Terry Cumming |
Version | 2.1 (August 17, 1994) |
Platform(s) | PC (MS-DOS) |
Release date | November 1993 |
Genre(s) | Pinball |
Mode(s) | Single player or 2-4 players (hotseat) |
Rating(s) | RSAC: ALL (CD-ROM version) |
Input methods | Keyboard |
Epic Pinball is a 1993 pinball computer game developed by James Schmalz and published by Epic MegaGames (now Epic Games). The initial release pre-dated Schmalz' Digital Extremes name. The game was designed and programmed primarily by James Schmalz and is played seen from a 2D top-down view within a horizontally scrollable window with plain raster graphics in 320x200. It was noted for being programmed entirely in assembly language. It is written for the x86 computer family for MS-DOS.
[edit] Tables
The game was originally distributed on floppy disks in 3 separate packs of 4 tables each. The original shareware version (and an early retail version) included only the original "Android" table. Later shareware versions and retail versions contained an updated version called "Super Android" (although it's still referred to as "Android" in the game, the table was changed to say "Super Android")
Pack 1:
- "Android"
- "Pot of Gold" (designed by Terry Cumming)
- "Excalibur"
- "Crash and Burn"
Pack 2:
- "Magic"
- "Jungle Pinball" (a tribute to Epic's earlier game Jill of the Jungle)
- "Deep Sea"
- "Enigma"
Pack 3:
- "Cyborgirl" (designed by Joe Hitchens)
- "Pangaea"
- "Space Journey" (this and the following table were designed and illustrated by Pixel of Future Crew)
- "Toy Factory"
Another table, "African Safari", was included in the "Full Edition" (the CD-ROM version), in addition to the tables from the three packs above.
[edit] See also
- Silverball
- Extreme Pinball