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User:Fractalchez/The Addams Family (pinball) Rewrite1

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The Addams Family
ManufacturerMidway
Release dateMarch 1992
SystemMidway WPC (Fliptronics I; also compatible w/ Fliptronics II)
DesignDesigners: Pat Lawlor, Larry DeMar
Programmers: Larry DeMar, Mike Boon
Artwork: John Youssi
Mechanics: John Krutsch
Music / Sound: Chris Granner
Production run20,270

The Addams Family is the best selling pinball machine of all time, having sold 20,270 units. Manufactured by Midway (under the Bally name), it is a solid state electronic game. It was based on the 1991 movie of the same name, and features custom speech (mostly drawn from the movie) by the movie's stars, Raul Julia and Anjelica Huston.

Overview

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The machine's game card describes the game objective as being to "Explore the strange world of the Addams Family." With that in mind there is no single player goal, though there are two central objectives:

  • The Mansion: The Addams Family mansion is located in the center of the playfield and has 12 "windows". Each window corresponds to a different room that the player can enter and receive an award for.
  • Vault Multiball: In the top-righthand section of the playfield is a blue "vault", representing the bookcase that Gomez shows Uncle Fester in the movie. Hits to it award letters in the word "Greed", and once it the word is completed, like in the movie, the vault turns, revealing a new shot to the player that lets him being the process of starting multiball.

Other lesser objectives include:

  • Bear Kicks: a ramp in the top center of the playfield awards 1 or 2 "bear kicks" (referencing the scene in the movie with the bear carpet that comes to life), awarding points, mansion rooms, and extra balls.
  • Staircase Ramp: a left-side ramp that awards an increasing number of millions, usually 1M-10M, and letters in the word "THING" (see THING below).
  • Graveyard: a set of 5 bumpers (a rare amount on modern machines) that increases the "Graveyard value", which is collected from a right-side shot.
  • Train Wreck: a dead-end shot in the top-left section that awards points, assists graveyard scoring, and lights extra balls.
  • GRAVE: 5 targets strewn around the field that award letters in the word "Grave", which when completed award an increasing amount of millions.
  • THING: Once the word THING is completed (see Millions Ramp above), a scoop in the top right corner awards an increasing multiple of 5 million points.

Reasons for popularity

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A number of simultaneous factors came together to give The Addams Family is record-setting sales figures.

Around the time of the game's release, video arcade games were declining in popularity, due largely to the technological ascent of home systems and increasing appeal of internet gaming. There was, further, a sense among players around this time that new video arcade titles were lacking in creativity[citation needed]. Meanwhile, pinball in the recent years prior had witnessed a strong wave of technological innovation. The dot-matrix display, for example, had just been added to the first pinball machine (Data East's Checkpoint) about a year before, and CPU advances allowed machines to perform simultaneous video, audio and gameplay functions more smoothly.

The Addams Family added to this a number of game-specific "toys" that proved popular with players:

  • Thing: A hand that comes out of a box and uses a magnet to pick up and store the ball when it lands in the appropriate spot.
  • The Power: a spinning triangle of under-playfield electromagnets in the middle of the board that, when during certain times in the game, activated in a generally random manner, causing the ball to move in unpredictable directions.
  • Thing Flips: Above the top left flipper was an opto that at certain points in the game let the machine attempt to read the speed of the ball, and taking control of the flipper from the player hit a shot on the opposite side of the field, the first CPU controlled flipper in pinball history. The game's ability to use missed shots to calibrate future attempts resulted in an automatic flip that was impressively accurate.

The game also made extensive use of the film it was based upon, arguably the most of any game at that time. Raul Julia and Anjelica Huston both contributed many re-recordings of quotes from the film, along with a number of extra quotes exclusive to the machine ("Jackpot!", "Extra Ball!", etc.). Much of the game's humor was also well-received, such as the mode "Hit Cousin Itt", where successful hits to the Cousin Itt target resulted in display animations of Itt getting hit with a large pinball, Gomez's (Julia's) response to the player upon tilting, "Hee hee hee, you're a funny guy!," and the machine occasionally flipping both of its lower flippers in tune to the finger snapping in the Addams Family theme song.

From a player's perspective the game received positive reviews for its good use of the playfield, its audio and video effects, "flow" (the way the game's shots and objectives lead naturally from one to another) appeal to both beginner and expert players, and general replayability.

Rules Summary

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Mansion

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Mansion rooms are awarded from the lit electric chair shot in the center of the playing field. A player can have more than one mansion room scoring mode activated simultaneously, something which is often considered good strategy. The rooms/modes are:

  • 3 Million, 6 Million, 9 Million: Separate rooms that award that many points.
  • Graveyard At Max: Sets each graveyard bumper to the maximum value of 50,000.
  • The Mamushka: Adds 250,000 for every switch the player hits to his end-of-ball-bonus.
  • Hit Cousin Itt: Adds 200,000 for every switch the player hits to his end-of-ball bonus at start. The more the player hits the Cousin Itt target, the higher the per-switch award goes.
  • Quick Multiball: Lights "Quick Multiball", allowing the player to start a two-ball multiball in which the vault opens, and shots into score an increasing award.
  • Fester's Tunnel Hunt: Awards the player 5, 10, and 15 million points for hitting the swamp, electric chair and vault.
  • Seance: Awards the player 5, 10, and 15 million points for each bear kick or staircase shot. "The Power" magnets are activated during this mode.
  • Thing Multiball: A "hurry-up" awards a number of points decreasing from 15 million to 3 million. If achieved before timing out, the player is awarded a two-ball multiball where shots to the vault award the "hurry up" score again.
  • Raise the Dead: For 30 seconds each set of 4 hits to a bumper in the graveyard adds 3 million points to the player's end-of-ball bonus.
  • Lite Extra Ball: The extra ball becomes available at Thing's saucer.

If the player manages to start all of the above scoring modes (regardless of whether or not they complete them), the attic room which lists on the playfield only a "?" awards the game's "wizard mode":

  • Tour the Mansion: Awards the player 50 million points, lights the extra ball, lights the "special" (free game) on the outlanes, maximizes the graveyard value, and starts each mode automatically, one after the other. If the ball drains, the round ends, and the player starts out the next ball with a new mansion to collect.

Vault Multiball

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The player can add letters to the word "GREED" by hitting the vault. Spelling "GREED" opens the vault, revealing a shot that can be used to "lock" (hold) balls for multiball; for the first multiball, the swamp can also be used to lock balls. The Power turns on for the player's attempt to lock the third and final ball. Multiball can be started from the vault or, for the first multiball, the electric chair.

Once multiball begins the Train Wreck shot lights up for a Jackpot, and the Staircase Ramp for a Double Jackpot or, from the 2nd multiball onward, Triple Jackpot. The Jackpot starts out at 10 million, and increases by one million for every Bear Kicks shot or shot to a closed vault during the multiball. Upon receiving either, the vault re-opens, and a successful shot to it re-lights only the Staircase Ramp. The player may continue to do this as long as there are two balls on the playing field.

If a player does not get any jackpot, a last-chance "Thing Multiball" lights up for 20 seconds. If the player shoots it in time, he gets to launch a second ball and continue the multiball per the rules above, except with no more last chances given.

Scoring

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Scores on The Addams Family tend to have an average in the low 8-digit range. Barring tilting, the lowest possible score in the game is a little under 2 million. Among machines found in public locations, the score necessary to obtain a replay is usually between 35 million and 80 million, with high scores dispersed mostly among the full 9-digit spectrum. The world's best players will occasionally score in the billions.

Special Collector's Edition

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In October 1994, Bally produced a "Special Collectors Edition", often referred to as The Addams Family Gold. In the original run of The Addams Family a few machines had been produced with golden features to celebrate the machine's sales record. The Collector's Addition similarly featured specially designed accents such as golden siderails, a golden lockbar, golden legs and a slightly enhanced software program.

The game also included a number of gameplay enhancements. New scoring rules were added, most notably to the Mansion. Some rooms randomly awarded players items from Cousin Itt, such as a hair dryer or brush, with an accompanying number of points. Wednesday and Pugsley also made their first in-game appearance in the form of a "trap door", that would sometimes let a player move from one room to another, awarding them both. Numerous new quotes and dot-matrix effects were also added.

Only one thousand Collector's Edition units were produced.

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