Arcade Collecting > Arcade1Up & Similar
Arcade 1up - Pinball, Star Wars with haptic Feedback
KenToad:
Yeah, I played one commercial virtual pinball at a game convention. It had all the bells and whistles and was running the Zelda table on VpinballX, which is a really well done table on IMO the best platform, but the flipper delay and the lack of realistic feedback really killed the experience. Unfortunately, dressing up the pinball simulation in a prom dress of a cabinet just really reminds you that it's nowhere near the real experience.
The most fun I've ever had playing Virtual Pinball was playing Vpinball9 on a desktop. I had setup a pair of buttons on each side of my old bartop. I played all the way through Attack from Mars, almost forgetting that it was a simulation, even though I was playing in desktop mode on a 17 inch CRT, because the flippers responded instantly. I'm usually not that sensitive to input lag, but I always notice with virtual pinball.
negative1:
--- Quote from: KenToad on October 24, 2020, 11:59:38 am ---Yeah, I played one commercial virtual pinball at a game convention. It had all the bells and whistles and was running the Zelda table on VpinballX, which is a really well done table on IMO the best platform, but the flipper delay and the lack of realistic feedback really killed the experience. Unfortunately, dressing up the pinball simulation in a prom dress of a cabinet just really reminds you that it's nowhere near the real experience.
The most fun I've ever had playing Virtual Pinball was playing Vpinball9 on a desktop. I had setup a pair of buttons on each side of my old bartop. I played all the way through Attack from Mars, almost forgetting that it was a simulation, even though I was playing in desktop mode on a 17 inch CRT, because the flippers responded instantly. I'm usually not that sensitive to input lag, but I always notice with virtual pinball.
--- End quote ---
some of these newer machines can handle the lag easily, and also have physical haptic feedback for nudges and bumps.
playing pinball on a pc or console is pointless because you don't get the full vertical playfield (or laid down) at the right angle.
later
-1
KenToad:
--- Quote from: negative1 on October 24, 2020, 02:05:55 pm ---
--- Quote from: KenToad on October 24, 2020, 11:59:38 am ---Yeah, I played one commercial virtual pinball at a game convention. It had all the bells and whistles and was running the Zelda table on VpinballX, which is a really well done table on IMO the best platform, but the flipper delay and the lack of realistic feedback really killed the experience. Unfortunately, dressing up the pinball simulation in a prom dress of a cabinet just really reminds you that it's nowhere near the real experience.
The most fun I've ever had playing Virtual Pinball was playing Vpinball9 on a desktop. I had setup a pair of buttons on each side of my old bartop. I played all the way through Attack from Mars, almost forgetting that it was a simulation, even though I was playing in desktop mode on a 17 inch CRT, because the flippers responded instantly. I'm usually not that sensitive to input lag, but I always notice with virtual pinball.
--- End quote ---
some of these newer machines can handle the lag easily, and also have physical haptic feedback for nudges and bumps.
playing pinball on a pc or console is pointless because you don't get the full vertical playfield (or laid down) at the right angle.
later
-1
--- End quote ---
The chances are that these retail ready machines will have significant input lag, as they are usually made of cheaper components.
negative1:
--- Quote from: KenToad on October 24, 2020, 04:24:32 pm ---
--- Quote from: negative1 on October 24, 2020, 02:05:55 pm ---
--- Quote from: KenToad on October 24, 2020, 11:59:38 am ---Yeah, I played one commercial virtual pinball at a game convention. It had all the bells and whistles and was running the Zelda table on VpinballX, which is a really well done table on IMO the best platform, but the flipper delay and the lack of realistic feedback really killed the experience. Unfortunately, dressing up the pinball simulation in a prom dress of a cabinet just really reminds you that it's nowhere near the real experience.
The most fun I've ever had playing Virtual Pinball was playing Vpinball9 on a desktop. I had setup a pair of buttons on each side of my old bartop. I played all the way through Attack from Mars, almost forgetting that it was a simulation, even though I was playing in desktop mode on a 17 inch CRT, because the flippers responded instantly. I'm usually not that sensitive to input lag, but I always notice with virtual pinball.
--- End quote ---
some of these newer machines can handle the lag easily, and also have physical haptic feedback for nudges and bumps.
playing pinball on a pc or console is pointless because you don't get the full vertical playfield (or laid down) at the right angle.
later
-1
--- End quote ---
The chances are that these retail ready machines will have significant input lag, as they are usually made of cheaper components.
--- End quote ---
if its doing 1080p / 60 fps, i don't think lag will be an issue.
once the specs are out. and it is handling pinball fx3 games, which are not easy to emulate without a decent processor.
later
-1
negative1:
pinball titles for arcade 1up:
https://www.ign.com/articles/arcade1up-reveals-star-wars-marvel-and-attack-from-mars-digital-pinball-games-lists
Marvel Games Pinball Included Games:
Spider-Man
Civil War
Wolverine
X-Men
Thor
Marvel's Women of Power- A-Force
Ghost Rider
Venom
Fantastic Four
Fear Itself
Star Wars Pinball Game List:
Boba Fett
A New Hope
Ahch-To Island
Battle of Mimban
Darth Vadar
Masters of the Force
Star Wars: Rebels
Han Solo
The Force Awakens
The Empire Strikes Back
Attack from Mars Pinball Game list:
Attack from Mars
Fish Tales
The Getaway
Junk Yard
Medieval Madness
White Water
Red & Ted
Funhouse
Tales of the Arabian Nights
No Good Gofers
later
-1
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
[*] Previous page
Go to full version