Pinball Illusions
Description official descriptions
Pinball Illusions is the successor to the Pinball Fantasies, using an upgraded game engine. The tables are Babewatch, Law & Justice, Extreme Sports, and (on PC CD versions) The Vikings. These contain ramps, bonus areas, and combo sequences to set up. All the artwork was produced in true 256 colors from the ground up for AGA Amigas and the PC, rather than originating in 32 colors on older Amigas.
New to this version is multiball: Pinball Illusions supports up to six balls simultaneously, in which case it switches to high-resolution mode. CD versions use CD audio for music.
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Credits (DOS version)
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[ full credits ] |
Reviews
Critics
Average score: 85% (based on 25 ratings)
Players
Average score: 4.1 out of 5 (based on 40 ratings with 1 reviews)
A good pinball game that could've been great if it wasn't so buggy.
The Good
Great visuals, great music and great sound effects. Pinball Illusions supports 640 x 480 & 800 x 600 SVGA graphics, which enables you to view the whole table at once. If you select one of the lower resolution VGA modes the game uses a very smooth scrolling mechanism. The thing I probably like the most about the graphics is the animated scoreboard / LED display at the bottom of the screen. It shows some very cool animations, especially while you're playing one of the special modes.
This game has amazing music for it's time (1995). Best of all the music ALWAYS suits the theme of the table and the gameplay. The music shifts from calm to urgent when you start a multi-ball mode.
Nice table design & a good collection of ramps. The table themes have really been worked our well into the gameplay. Pinball Illusions features some great modes. For example shoot 3 balls in the juke box and select a tune, challenge death while free falling - the longer you wait before you open your parachute the more points you receive. That is if you open your parachute in time, otherwise you'll only get the extreme death bonus ;->.
The Bad
Both the diskette- and the CD-ROM version are plagued by bugs that take a lot of the fun away:
- First of all, there is a bug that makes the Babewatch table almost unplayable. Almost every time I play this table, the ball gets stuck behind the blue light on the right side of the juke box. That's right, the blue light that is supposed to be part of the background.
- Sometimes the ball simply stops rolling, this is especially the case when the ball is in one of the slits next to the lower flippers.
- Sometimes the left flipper doesn't seem to respond very well (disk version).
- The CD-version has a problem with finding the right track on the CD when you start a special mode. Often all you here is silence.
The Bottom Line
Pinball Illusions and I have a long history together. I first played one of the tables from a pinball shareware CD-ROM and was very enthusiastic about it. When I accidently came across the CD-ROM version of the game about a year later, I immediately bought it. A couple of moths ago I found the diskette version on the Internet and I immediately downloaded it. In other words, I've played several versions of this game (although never the original Amiga version) and always become very enthusiastic & fanatic when I play this game. It's truly a shame that all those bugs weren't removed during beta testing! To my knowledge Pinball Fantasies never had these problems.
DOS · by Roedie (5239) · 2001
Trivia
Successor
Although Digital Illusions never programmed on the Amiga again, 21st Century released Pinball Mania as a supposed continuation of the series. It was bundled with the Amiga when Escom relaunched it.
Tables
Digital Illusions used the same 4 tables of this game in the PlayStation / Sega Saturn release True Pinball. The difference? On the PlayStation & Saturn the tables were modeled in 3D.
Version differences
The PC CD-ROM version has one more table that was not found in the original Amiga version: The Vikings. This table was removed from the Amiga version at the last minute, as they felt it wasn't of a high enough quality to merit the game needing an extra disk. As both Pinball Dreams and Pinball Fantasies had four tables, as did most other pinball games of the day, this wasn't a popular decision.
Awards
- Amiga Joker
- Issue 02/1996 – #3 Best Simulation in 1995 (Readers' Vote)
Information also contributed by Martin Smith and Roedie
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by IJan.
Amiga CD32 added by Kabushi. Amiga added by Terok Nor.
Additional contributors: Patrick Bregger.
Game added December 15th, 1999. Last modified January 19th, 2024.