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Terminator 2: Judgment Day is a 1991 pinball machine designed by Steve Ritchie and released by Williams Electronics. It is based on the motion picture of the same name.
Manufacturer | Williams[1] |
---|---|
Release date | July 1991 |
System | Williams WPC (Dot Matrix) |
Design | Steve Ritchie |
Programming | Dwight Sullivan |
Artwork | Doug Watson |
Mechanics | Carl Biagi |
Music | Chris Granner |
Sound | Chris Granner |
Voices | Arnold Schwarzenegger (The Terminator) |
Production run | 15,202 |
Overview
editThe table is the first Williams WPC machine designed to feature a dot-matrix display. But due to the long design phase, Gilligan's Island is the first manufactured with a DMD. Terminator 2: Judgment Day is the first game to feature an autoplunger (replacing the traditional plunger), as well as a ball-firing cannon (dubbed, "Gun Grip Ball Launcher"). Finally, T2 is the first game to feature a video mode, a mini video game featured on the DMD. Arnold Schwarzenegger provided voices for the game. Some playfield design elements were based on Ritchie's 1980 classic, Firepower. The T-1000 is not in the artwork, with the exception of a small image of actor Robert Patrick because of pre-release secrecy of the movie. The character is only in the display animation because when the DMD programming was finalizing the liquid metal character was already public knowledge.[2]
A score award is given for each extra ball awarded after hitting the max extra balls.
Interestingly, the major features of this game are the same as the 4th and final table in the classic 1992 Commodore Amiga game Pinball Dreams, called Nightmare, or Graveyard on other platforms. These include the left and right runs which allow you to advance up the central ladder to activate huge scoring opportunities.
Reception
editSinclair User gave the pinball game a 91% score.[3]
Legacy
edit2003's Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines from Stern has a very similar playfield design and rulesheet.
Terminator 2: Judgment Day was formerly available as a licensed table of The Pinball Arcade for any platform until June 30, 2018 due to the WMS license's expiration and made this table disappear from every digital store.
References
edit- ^ "Terminator 2: Judgment Day". The International Arcade Museum. Retrieved 13 Oct 2013.
- ^ "Internet Pinball Machine Database: Terminator 2: Judgment Day". August 24, 2013.
- ^ Cook, John (18 November 1991). "Coin Ops". Sinclair User. No. 118 (December 1991). United Kingdom: EMAP. pp. 62–3.