3D Ultra Pinball: Thrillride | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Dynamix Left Field Productions (GBC) |
Publisher(s) | Sierra On-Line |
Series | 3-D Ultra Pinball |
Platform(s) | Windows, Macintosh, Game Boy Color |
Release | PC
|
Genre(s) | Pinball |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
3-D Ultra Pinball: Thrillride is a 2000 pinball game developed for Windows and Macintosh by Dynamix Inc. and for the Game Boy Color by Left Field Productions, and published by Sierra On-Line. The game is part of the 3-D Ultra Pinball series of pinball games.
Thrillride is a pinball game with an amusement park theme, set in Hersheypark. Gameplay involves the player collecting points by hitting bumpers, lighting up words, completing different rides and visiting the "snack shop". For the PC version, the game features one primary table, and a secondary Thrill Zone table. There are two multiball ramps: the Wildcat and the Coal Cracker. The former is themed as a roller coaster and the latter as a water ride. Two of the Fun Zone puzzles direct the players to secondary tables: a River Rafting table and a Lightning Racer Virtual Coaster. In addition, Thrillride features a number of minigames on the side, including hitting markers to activate the Fun Zone, or a Hershey's Hide and Seek event triggered after hitting the Snack Bar 50 times, where players must use the ball to catch the animated treats hiding around the primary table. [1]
Publication | Score | |
---|---|---|
GBC | PC | |
AllGame | [2] | [1] |
GameSpot | 6.3 [3] | |
IGN | 5/10 [4] | 7.9 [5] |
Adrenaline Vault | [6] |
Thrillride received mixed reviews, with the PC version of the game received more lukewarm reception. Ron Dulin of GameSpot praised the "bonus tasks" and "substantial bonus games", although noted that Thrillride "is meant as nothing more than a fun diversion and not as a hardcore pinball simulation aimed at silver-ball fanatics", observing "the lack of a challenge makes the game a bit tedious". [3] IGN stated that the "quality of the simulation is excellent", and praised the game's "smorgasboard of special modes" that "excel on all counts", whilst noting the "absence of replay value incentive". [5] Computer Games stated that the game was "pretty fun" with "plenty of skill shots", praising the visuals of the game for being "colorful, loud (and) in your face". [7]
The Game Boy Color version of Thrillride received mixed to negative reviews. Writing for Allgame, Jon Thompson praised the "impressive" rules list and range of "different modes and multiball events" to add to the game, but stated "the physicas of the table are not great...as the ball is quite floaty and reacts oddly to many hits and shots". [2] In a negative review, IGN stated that the game was "not nearly as fun or addictive as it could be", observing that "the visuals are flat", with tables being "downright empty, with boring ramps and few features". [4]
A glossary of terms, commonly used in discussing pinball machines.
Medieval Madness is a Williams pinball machine released in June 1997. Designed by Brian Eddy and programmed by Lyman Sheats, it had a production run of 4,016 units. As of April 3, 2022, the Pinside pinball community lists it as the #2 highest-ranked pinball machine ; many adherents consider it the greatest of all time.
Pin-Bot is a pinball machine released by Williams in October 1986. It was designed by Python Anghelo and Barry Oursler.
The Addams Family is a pinball machine released in March 1992. It was designed by Pat Lawlor and Larry DeMar and released by Midway. It was based on the 1991 film of the same name, and features custom speech by the stars of the film, Anjelica Huston and Raul Julia. It is the best-selling solid state pinball machine of all time with 20,270 units sold.
3-D Ultra Pinball is a series of pinball computer games developed by Sierra Entertainment's Dynamix. The games try to escape from the traditional, arcade pinball and feature animation, more than one table at once, and "temporary targets".
Patrick M. Lawlor is a video game and pinball machine designer.
Pro Pinball: The Web is a pinball simulation video game developed by Cunning Developments for PlayStation, MS-DOS, Windows 95 and Sega Saturn. It is the first game in the Pro Pinball series.
Twilight Zone is a widebody pinball machine, designed by Pat Lawlor and based on the TV series of the same name. It was first released in 1993 by Midway. This game is part of WMS' SuperPin line of widebody games alongside Star Trek: The Next Generation and Indiana Jones: The Pinball Adventure.
Cirqus Voltaire is a 1997 pinball game, designed by John Popadiuk and released by Williams Electronics Games. The theme involves the player performing many different marvels in order to join the circus. Some of the game's distinctive features include a neon light running along the right-hand ramp, a pop bumper that rises up from the middle of the playfield at certain times, and a magnet at the top of the left ramp that can catch balls and divert them into the locks. The most notable feature is the Ringmaster, a head that rises at certain times and taunts the player.
Attack from Mars is a 1995 pinball game designed by Brian Eddy, and released by Midway.
Creature from the Black Lagoon is a pinball machine designed by John Trudeau and released by Midway. It is loosely based on the movie of the same name. The game's theme is 1950s drive-in theater. The pinball game was licensed from Universal Studios by Bally so that all backglass and cabinet artwork and creature depictions would resemble those of the original movie.
FunHouse is a pinball machine designed by Pat Lawlor and released in November 1990 by Williams Electronics. Starring a talking ventriloquist dummy named Rudy, the game is themed after the concept of an amusement park funhouse. FunHouse is one of the last Williams games to use an alphanumeric display; the company switched to dot matrix the following year.
Dream Pinball 3D is a pinball simulation game developed by TopWare Interactive and published by SouthPeak Games for Microsoft Windows, first released online in 2006, and then ported to Wii and Nintendo DS in 2008. Dream Pinball 3D features six tables to play on, each with a distinct theme, including a medieval table, an aquatic table, a monsters table, and a dinosaurs table. Apart from the different visual styles, each of these tables pose a different challenge because of their varying flipper, ramp, and bumper positions.
The Party Zone is a crossover solid-state pinball machine released in 1991 by Midway designed by Dennis Nordman and programmed by Jim Strompolis. It is in a single playfield format and collaborates characters from previous pinball machines. It is the second pinball machine released after the Bally-Midway division was sold, yet still operated under the "Bally" name.
Pro Pinball: Fantastic Journey is an action video game developed by Cunning Developments, published by Empire Interactive and distributed by Take-Two Interactive for Microsoft Windows and PlayStation. It is the fourth game in the Pro Pinball series. Elements of the game include combinations of Victorian era settings, steam powered machinery, steampunk style nautical adventures, and fictional islands.
Harley-Davidson is a Sega Pinball pinball machine released in September 1999 and was the last machine released by this company. It was designed by Jon Borg and Lonnie D. Ropp.
Sorcerer is a 1985 pinball machine designed by Mark Ritchie and released by Williams Electronics. The table is placed in the "Internet Pinball Data Base Top 100 Rated Electronic Pinball Machines" chart.
Digital Pinball: Last Gladiators is a video game developed and published by KAZe for the Sega Saturn. Its working title was Pinball Arena. A successor, Digital Pinball: Necronomicon, was released in 1996 for the Saturn. An updated version, Digital Pinball: Last Gladiators Ver.9.7, was released in 1997 for the Saturn. Last Gladiators was ported to iOS in April 2010 as Last Gladiators Ver.2010.
3-D Ultra Pinball: Creep Night is a video game released in 1996 for Windows and Macintosh, and is the second game in 3-D Ultra Pinball video game series.
3-D Ultra NASCAR Pinball is a racing video game released in 1998 for Windows and Macintosh, and is the fourth game in 3-D Ultra Pinball video game series. It was also released under the title 3-D Ultra Pinball: Turbo Racing. The game received the Everyone rating from the Entertainment Software Rating Board. The game uses an improved graphics engine from the previous 3-D Ultra Pinball titles, which takes advantage of greater color depth and resolution up to 800x600 pixels. On the game's CD, the publishers have added texts and videos about NASCAR races.