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Central Park is a pinball machine that was released by Gottlieb in 1966. The game was sold in 3,100 units. It was designed by Ed Krynski and the art was done by Roy Parker.[1]
Manufacturer | Gottlieb |
---|---|
Release date | April 1966 |
Design | Ed Krynski |
Artwork | Roy Parker |
Production run | 3,100 |
Gameplay
editCentral Park is a very difficult game due to the large gap between the flippers. The goal of the game is to raise a special called the Tree Bonus by collecting numbers. The player can collect numbers by hitting targets at the top of the playfield. Every time 100 points are scored in Central Park an animated monkey on the backglass will ring a bell. Hitting the 7 and 9 would light up a bumper, earning 10 points instead of the usual 1. The 2 and 4 would also light up a bumper.
Design team
edit- Concept: Ed Krynski
- Game Design: Ed Krynski
- Mechanics: Ed Krynski
- Artwork: Art Stenholm, Roy Parker
- Animation: Ed Krynski
Digital versions
editCentral Park is available as a licensed table of The Pinball Arcade for several platforms, and can be adjusted to have extra balls allowed or not, however the table is defaulted to five ball play. The table appeared also in Pinball Hall of Fame: The Gottlieb Collection on multiple video game consoles.
References
editExternal links
edit- Central Park at the Internet Pinball Database