E3 is never a time for social calls. Itās nonstop work. Last June, the only developer I met with outside the walls of the L.A. Convention Center was over drinks with Zen Studiosā U.S. staff at the J.W. Marriott.
Theyād built a great name for themselves with Pinball FX2, and their profile shot through the roof in 2011 with Marvelās license on their series of virtual pinball tables. āWhere do you go from here? Whatās coming up next?ā I asked.
āWe have some ideas, and some big things we canāt talk about right now,ā was the reply, with a knowing glance.
āOh, shit,ā I said, āYou got Star Wars.ā
Iāve long known this was an ambition for Neil Sorens, Zenās creative director, and all of the Zen team, here and in Hungaryāindeed, there are 10 tables coming, and everyone on the development staff was given a crack at one. The fruits of that labor began releasing today, with three tables for Zenās platform on Xbox Live and the PlayStation Network, as well as for Android and iOS mobile devices.
After playing this set for a week, I can sense that their difficulty has a similar spread. Clone Wars was the easiest and highest-scoring table for me; Boba Fett will require the most accuracy to reach eye-popping points totals. Touching both is Empire Strikes Back. Though it regularly rewards a player with big eight-figure numbers, the main objectiveāto replay what is, basically, the entire movie, through a series of timed pinball missionsāis tougher than anything Iāve faced in Zen Pinballās 41 tables.
Empire gives you a series of five āscenesā which come in the form of missionsāa set of tasks to complete, usually hitting a target or a ramp. Triggering the scene/mission is simple enoughāthereās a three-paneled console at the center of the table, and lighting up all of its sides opens a trap door that, after rolling a ball into the trap, allows you to select a scene-mission for play, in or out of order. For beginners, I recommend Scene 3, the Asteroid Field, as itās the easiest and most points-rich.
Still, hopping the ball three times over a ramp to the back reaches of the table is only the beginning. Fortunately, completing any task (hitting a ramp or a target) usually delivers a million-point-bonus. But to truly drag out the toys, like an animated AT-AT in one of the Hoth sequences, requires a lot of persistence. Yes, thereās a checkpoint mechanism, so if you finish one stage of a scene, then lose a ball, you can pick up from where you left off later. But the time given to complete any of these sequences is preciously short and tolerates one, maybe two mistakes at the most. Hitting the wrong ramp ends in an agonizing, time-sucking loss.
As the missions go further, accuracy becomes a higher priority, as does transferring the ball from one flipper to the other. Boba Fett places the highest priority on this, with its swooping ramps (symbolizing jetpack flight) that often end up returning the ball to the side you wanted to avoid. Missions in Boba Fett arenāt cinematicātheyāre cash-on-the-barrelhead rewards you can unlock after lighting the EMPIRE or HUTTS lane. Each mission brings out Darth or Jabba to instruct you (or reprimand you, if you failed the past try). Even though EMPIRE was one more letter, I found it easier to trigger. Once a bounty is acquired, you have to hit all of the boardās lanes (there are seven) to win its jackpot. The good news is, hitting any lane awards 1 million points.
So even if seeing missions through to the end is very difficult, Star Wars Pinball does offers a means of strategically failing them in order to plunder the instances for points (Scene 3 in Empire is useful, plus anything in Fett.) In The Clone Wars, I advise taking the mission āThe Monsterā once you unlock the Council (by hitting two ramps a total of eight times.) Hitting Maulās hover-thing returns a million each time you strike it and is much easier than āAttack on Kamino.ā
There is still a lot on the board that Iāve yet to discover, or have only seen once or a few times. (I made the Slave 1 fly into Boba Fett only once). Thereās an instance in Empire that sends you into a wild first-person combat mode where you block laser stings from a training drone (never mind thatās from Episode IV, itās still rad). Boba Fettās skillshot feels arbitrarily awarded but it brings up a nice minigame on the main display. To reach the epic Luke vs. Vader showdown will take extraordinary persistence and accuracy. These tables are marketed for everyone, but very, very few, I think, will watch all of The Empire Strikes Back on its dot matrix board.
Thatās how I recall the great movie adaptations on pinball machinesāadaptations which precede arcade or console games. There was always something lurking deep in the game, and there was always some kid or, more likely, the older brother of some kid, who could make the big secret come to life. Itāll cost $10, not a thousand quarters, to make everything happen, but the challenge is still pizza-parlor authentic.
I was able to get myself past 25 million on Clone and Empire after getting the series on Thursday, and hit 13 million on Fett. Thereās a lot more to discover.
But if you ask me what I think of Zenās effort so far, Iām brought back to my first thought: Oh shit. They got Star Wars.