The recent pinball questionaire has prompted this thread.
The final question of where you see the hobby in 10 years is obviously the most difficult to answer as we have no crystal ball. However, the clues to this i feel are in the interaction that our kids have.
Talking to my dad over a few beers, we know where we would like to see pinball BE right now and maybe into the future but i cant see it happen.
Personally, id like to see a clear laminate board over a flat plasma or LCD screen, as the game progresses the artwork changes with the plasma. Hitting targets can have explosions happen, a guy could be chasing the ball as it runs over the pf etc. With todays technology, pinball could blow your mind IF it had kept in line with technology. Unfortunately, i think we all agree that pinball has and will continue to stagnate with Stern.
But.. there is hope. My son who is 7 can name every machine i have, knows the game play etc.
I involve him in my restorations - he even helps me to sand back playfields, we do it together. I explain to him how they work etc.
Now theme is EVERYTHING, and my son is designing his own Ben 10 pinball. The PF layout is drawn out - he is slowly collecting parts to make his own. I find bits of paper with fuses, capacitors, IC's etc all stuck down with blue tac. I gave him some PCB and he has stuck in a ton of LED's, caps, resistors and a multiplexer.
Ill show him how to make those LED's flash with a 555 timer and potentiometer, with a small speaker we can even have noise.
ALL this came from me working on pins - he loves them. he even got his own Super Mario Bros pin for Xmas which is a real hit.
Cant predict it will last, but Ninos passion stemmed from his dad and although im not pushing my son, he seems to enjoy all the aspects of pinball ownership.
yep - he's no different to any other kid - loves the PS2, but once the game is done, its achievement is over but the challenge of pinball never stops - there is no end to the game, just a battle with yourself to beat a previous score.
With this sort of interest... id say the hobby may well be in good hands for years to come!