The Wizard of Oz (pinball)

The Wizard of Oz is a Jersey Jack Pinball, Inc. pinball machine designed by Joe Balcer and released in April 2013. It is the first US pinball machine with an LCD in the back box as well as the first one to have color on the monitor produced in the US since the Pinball 2000 games.[1] Although it is not the first pinball machine with a LCD worldwide because MarsaPlay in Spain manufactured a remake of Inder's original Canasta titled New Canasta, with an LCD screen in the backbox in 2010.[2][3]

The Wizard of Oz
ManufacturerJersey Jack Pinball, Inc.
Release dateApril 2013
DesignJoe Balcer
ProgrammingKeith P. Johnson, Ted Estes
ArtworkJerry Vanderstelt, Greg Freres, Matt Riesterer
MusicChris Granner, Rob Berry
SoundChris Granner, Rob Berry

The Wizard of Oz is the first widebody pinball machine since 1994[4] and the first new US pinball machine not made by Stern Pinball since 2001.[5] The pinball machine is based on the classic 1939 film version The Wizard of Oz, itself based on the 1900 novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum.[5]

Description

The backbox has a 26-inch HD display[1] that displays film clips in full color[4] and the playfield is illuminated by RGB LED lights that can change into any color as industry firsts.[1][6] Widebody pinball machines as The Wizard of OZ offer more playfield space and more to be packed in but has been too expensive because pinball sales have been in decline since 1994.[4] The machine also includes two completely filled out upper playfields.[4]

The machine costs $9,000 and Jersey Jack Pinball, Inc. has spent $2 million into the production.[7] Jersey Jack Pinball licenses its flippers from Planetary Pinball Supply and builds its soundboards in partnership with Massachusetts’ Pinnovators.[6] The sound system supports stereo and has 600 watts of power.[4] A $300,000 inkjet printer was used for printing the artwork. Jersey Jack tested more than 10 different playfield finishes, rolling and shooting hundreds of thousands of balls.[6] The machine uses Williams parts.[4]

Toys includes ruby slipper flippers, Munchkin huts and roofs, the disappearing witch, the witch legs in the house, the witch castle walls, the throwing apple trees, the state fair balloon, the topper, the laser-cut Oz head, a crystal ball[8] that displays videos,[6] a spinning house and flying monkey assemblies.[4] The machine includes 5 flippers[8] with a reverse flippers mode,[4] 4 pop bumpers, 2 slingshots, 5 magnets,[8] 2 in front of the wicked witch,[4] 2 vertical up-kickers, 1 drop target and 1 spinning target.[8]

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gollark: > If you oppose compromises to privacy on the grounds that you could do something that is misidentified as a crime, being more transparent does helpI mean, sure. But I worry about lacking privacy for reasons other than "maybe the government will use partial data or something and accidentally think I'm doing crimes".
gollark: Also, you can probably just treat privacy as a "terminal goal" like all the other weird drives us foolish humans have, but I think there are good reasons for it based on other stuff.
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gollark: I don't understand what you're saying.

See also

References

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