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Manufacturer | Midway |
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Release date | March 1992 |
System | Midway WPC (Fliptronics I) |
Design | Pat Lawlor, Larry DeMar |
Programming | Larry DeMar, Mike Boon |
Artwork | John Youssi |
Mechanics | John Krutsch |
Music | Chris Granner |
Sound | Chris Granner |
Voices | Raul Julia (Gomez) Anjelica Huston (Morticia) |
Production run |
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The Addams Family is a pinball machine released in March 1992. It was designed by Pat Lawlor and Larry DeMar and released by Midway (under the Bally label). It was based on the 1991 film of the same name, and features custom speech (mostly derived from the motion picture) 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. [1]
Negotiations for the license initially began between the developers of the film, Orion, and Roger Sharpe at Williams. They were concluded with Paramount who took over completion of the film when production costs rose. Some, including Pat Lawlor, had reservations about obtaining the license after Orion got into financial difficulties.
At a lunch with Ken Fedesna, general manager of Williams Electronics, Pat Lawlor learned that the license had been secured. He quickly went to Roger Sharpe and said his favourite television show when young was The Addams Family and asked to be the designer for this game. [2]
During production of the game, the performance of Raul Julia was noted as being particularly good by the sound designer, Chris Granner. Angelica Houston insisted her nose was redrawn on the backglass from an early version, so the artist John Youssi flew to California to draw a sketch and obtain approval. [3]
The game was launched at a sound stage at Paramount Pictures. Pat Lawlor and other members of the design team went on a radio show hosted by Rick Dees. A live broadcast included members of the cast of the film, producer Scott Rudin, and M. C. Hammer. [4]
The machine's game card describes the game objective as being to "Explore the strange world of the Addams Family". With that in mind there is no single player goal, though there are two central objectives:
Other lesser objectives include:
An electric chair is positioned above a sinkhole at the center of the playfield. At the beginning of each ball, it is lit and will award the currently flashing mansion room (rotated by the bumpers) if hit. The player must then shoot either ramp to relight the chair. The Swamp kickout hole will also award the flashing room if it is shot while the chair is lit.
Mounted beneath the central portion of the playfield is "The Power", a set of spinning magnets that can alter the path of the ball. Flashing lights in this area indicate when the Power is active.
The game includes a topper which extends the design of the mansion on the backglass into a cloud, and is lit by flashers to simulate lightning. [6]
Mansion rooms are awarded by shooting the electric chair when lit, shooting the Swamp kickout hole while the chair is lit, or by reaching set threshold numbers of bear kicks. Once a mansion room is awarded, the electric chair light goes out until it is relit permanently by a shot to either ramp, or temporarily by hitting the right inlane. The chair is lit/relit at the start of each ball, and the flashing room is rotated by hitting the jet bumpers. Mansion room scoring modes can run simultaneously.
The awards are:
Mansion rooms cannot be collected/spotted during any multiball, or after the player has locked two balls for Vault Multiball. However, if any timed modes are in progress when a multiball is started, they will continue normally.
Once all mansion rooms have been collected, the chair immediately relights and will start the game's "wizard mode" (indicated by the flashing "?" in the uppermost room) the next time it is hit.
The player can add letters to the word "GREED" by hitting the bookcase in front of the vault. Spelling "GREED" opens the bookcase, revealing a shot into the vault that can be used to "lock" (hold) balls for multiball; for the first multiball, Thing's scoop can be used to lock the first two balls and the second one can be locked in the swamp. The Power turns on for the player's attempt to lock the third and final ball. Multiball can be started from the vault or, for the first multiball, the electric chair.
Once multiball begins, the Power remains active and the Train Wreck shot lights up for a Jackpot. The Staircase Ramp lights up for a Super Jackpot (Double on the first multiball, Triple on all others). The Jackpot starts out at 10 million, and increases by 1 million for every Bear Kicks shot or shot to a closed vault during the multiball (to a maximum of 25 million). After either jackpot is scored, the vault re-opens, and a successful shot to it re-lights only the Staircase Ramp. The player may continue to do this as long as two or more balls are in play.
If two balls drain without any jackpot being scored, the player is given 20 seconds to shoot Thing's scoop and restart multiball, but with two balls instead of three. The jackpot resumes its previous value, and another restart chance is not given if the player fails to score a jackpot before one ball drains.
In October 1994, Bally produced a "Special Collectors Edition", often referred to as The Addams Family Gold. Towards the end of the original production run of The Addams Family, some machines were produced with golden features to celebrate the game's sales record. The "Special Collectors Edition" similarly featured specially designed gold accents on the playfield/cabinet and an updated software program. An "extra ball" buy-in button was added to the front of the cabinet where a player could spend a credit for an additional ball in the same game if the setting to allow it had been selected by the operator/owner.
The game also included some play enhancements, as noted below: [7]
Only one thousand machines of the Special Collectors Edition were ever produced, each carrying the number (0001-1000) on a plaque below the coin door. 1,000 orders were received before the game was produced, with Pat Lawlor retaining number one for himself. [8] A certificate with the corresponding number and the signatures of production and development team members was also unique for this edition. [9]
The Addams Family pinball contains two known Easter eggs—plus a third egg in the Special Collectors Edition—each of which can be accessed using a flipper and Start button code sequence specific to each egg. The results produced are cosmetic in nature only; they do not modify actual game play in any way.
The codes work only under the following conditions: The machine must be in its Attract or "game over" mode (no game currently in progress). There must also be no credits on the machine. The Start button cannot be flashing to begin a new game; consequently, the codes will never work if the machine is set for free play.
The codes may also temporarily stop working if they are done too many times in a row, allowing the Attract mode display screens to cycle all the way through (at least 1 or 2 minutes) before trying a code again should rectify this.
The available Easter eggs and how to activate them: [10]
When the theme music is played at the end of a game or in attract mode some of the time at random the flippers flip in time to the end of the chorus. [6]
Some aftermarket modifications may be found in some machines:
The game won the award for the most played pinball machine for 1992 at the AMOA awards, the fourth Pat Lawlor machine to win an award there after Earthshaker , Whirlwind , and FunHouse. It also won the award for best innovation for Larry DeMar's Thing Flips. [11] At the 1993 AMOA awards it again won most played pinball machine for that year. [12] [13]
In Play Meter's monthly equipment poll it first appeared at no.1 for pinball in April 1992, [14] a position it held for a total of at least 16 (non-consecutive) months, with the last in December 1995. [15]
In a retro review in 2022 for Pinball Mag, the gameplay was highly praised, and the game was called a "world under glass". The sound and call-outs were also praised; the animations on the DMD were noted as not as good as on some other contemporary pinball machines such as Creature from the Black Lagoon. Found not to be as deep a game as more recent games, in the context of 1992 games its commercial success was understood. [6]
The Addams Family was the first game to have a series of modes which are played before a wizard mode. Almost all subsequently released pinball machines included a wizard mode. [2]
In a 2022 Wired article its continued popularity with collectors was noted. [16]
A version of this table was in development for the Nintendo 64 and would be developed by Digital Eclipse and published by GT Interactive, but was cancelled. [17]
The game is also supported by Visual Pinball, [18] which can also be made by some people to play through a home made pinball cabinet, like the original but digitally emulated.
In July 2014, FarSight Studios released The Pinball Arcade Newsletter 29 indicating they "agreed upon terms with all of the major licenses and clearances" needed to digitally recreate this table. [19] [20] A Kickstarter to raise the $97,640 needed for licensing was initiated on September 12, and successfully funded $115,276 on its closing date of October 12.
Farsight Studios released their digitized version of the table in February 2015 as part of the Season Four package of The Pinball Arcade on iOS, Android, Amazon, Steam (PC & Mac) and OUYA. [21] The images of Christopher Lloyd (Uncle Fester) and Jimmy Workman (Pugsley) were altered in this version due to licensing issues. [22] [23] The "Special Collectors Gold Edition" was one of the rewards for those who pledged over $100 during the Kickstarter campaign. [24] The table was delisted on June 30, 2018, [25] due to losing the license of WMS.
Zen Studios released a version of the table on February 16, 2023 [26] [27] as part of the launch (after an early access period) of Pinball FX on PlayStation, Xbox and Epic Games Store, with a Steam release following on April 13, 2023 [28] and subsequent releases on Switch and mobile platforms. This too was with altered images of Christopher Lloyd and Jimmy Workman.
ATGames have released a range of Legends pinball 4K cabinets, one of which features The Addams Family, but with different cabinet artwork to the original table. This was first shown to the public at the Pinball Expo 2023. [29]
A year after the release of this table, in 1993, a redemption game was released based on Addams Family Values . This uses the same DCS sound system as on other 1993 pinball tables, and on its advertising flyer noted the success of the The Addams Family pinball. [30]