Businesses Warn Of Job Losses Threat As...
News2 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Golem. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think that spaced is wrong, if the table is level left to right then it would be random as to where the ball goes.
Pinball tables are designed that if you don't hit a ramp or other feature then the ball just bobbles and floats about and sooner or later hits a hazard that is designed to send it down the middle.
Also, some pinball tables have powerful electromagnets underneath the playing surface and can control where the ball goes to a high degree, some of the arcs the ball makes are unnatural and would never happen without the magnets controlling it.
Personally I think there are little invisible imps which, from time to time, grab the ball and run rowards a flipper making it appear as though you are going to hit the ball. Then at the last minute the damned imp jumps down the middle just after the light for "free replay" stops flashing.
On the other hand... I own the windows XP pinball game! I think my topscore is about 4billion :-D
Excellent, thankyou mibn2cweus. Not quite the answer I was looking for but I appreciate the sentiments!
Now we have the emotional and psychological aspects of pinball established, I'm still wondering if they are undermined by the more crude and unsubtle practices of magnets, as II_billym suggests, a cleverly textured playing surface that 'channels' the ball and a sinister obsession with angles that all focus on that one spot in the middle of the bottom edge of the base board.
All 'simple physics' for sure, but I don't think it's as simple as spaced suggests.