Fireball (pinball)
Fireball is a historically notable pinball machine designed by Ted Zale and released by Bally in 1972. The table was one of the first to have a modern sci-fi/fantasy type of outer space theme and featured elaborate, painted artwork on the sides of the table, painted by Dave Christensen.
Manufacturer | Bally |
---|---|
Release date | February, 1972 |
Design | Ted Zale |
Artwork | Dave Christensen |
Production run | 3,815 |
Description
The game itself is notable as it featured several pinball innovations, including a spinning disc, moveable "zipper" flippers, and trapped ball bonuses. Fireball was also an early table to have the multi-ball (three balls, in this case) feature. Fireball's main surface and raised surface also featured elaborate artwork of a flaming "fire man", flames, and stars in space. The table is highly valued as a collector's item.
FireBall Professional Home model
Partly due to the success of the original Fireball pinball machine, Bally released a "Professional Home Model" available to the regular consumer beginning in 1978. The layout was different from the arcade Fireball; it was a slight modification of the Bally's Hocus Pocus playfield with the subtraction of a ball diverter gate.[1]
Fireball Classic
In February 1985, Bally released Fireball Classic. While the field closely resembled the original this version was electronic and had zipper-flippers.[2]
Cultural references
Richard Linklater plays a rotoscoped Fireball in his 2001 film Waking Life, in the penultimate scene where he expounds Dickian gnosticism to the protagonist.
Also, Linkater's 1993 film Dazed and Confused features a scene that shows extreme close-ups of a game being played on a Fireball.
During the episode "Pinball" (Original air date: November 29, 1985) of the television series Mr. Belvedere, the title character becomes obsessed with a "Firebomb" pinball machine, a slightly altered Fireball.
Digital version
Fireball is a licensed table of The Pinball Arcade and comes with El Dorado (1975) as a single DLC.
References
- http://www.xmission.com/~daina/images/tj/fireball_home.html
- Michael Shalhoub (2005). The Pinball Compendium. Schiffer. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-7643-4107-6.
External links
- Fireball at the Internet Pinball Database