Jurassic Park Pinball
Jurassic Park Pinball
   Jurassic Park Pinball | Classic Pinball Machines


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Jurassic Park Pinball



The pinball contest was about to start as Tommy signed in as a contestant. The winner would receive a silk embroidered Jurassic Park jacket, plus $500. Tommy had spent weeks getting ready for this contest, hoping to receive the first place prize. While other kids had spent time hanging out with friends, he'd talked his dad into getting a pinball machine and putting it into the garage. It didn't have all the fancy bells and whistles that Jurassic Park had, but the practice was very important.



As the other kids tried their best at making the highest pinball score, Tommy and the others watched, crowded around but careful not to touch the machine lest someone say they had tilted it and disqualified the player. He studied the machine carefully as the pinball bounced among the park bumpers in a never ending cacophony of cascading buzzers and flashing lights. Dinosaurs lit up or appeared out of nowhere, as the ball would become momentarily trapped, then released just before it was swallowed alive. When the two-ball mode was triggered, the player was twice as busy coordinating the ricocheting meteors within the inside of the glass cage pinball machine. He had thought that his practice would make him good enough to win, but Jurassic Park was a whole different story.

After watching all the other boys line up and take their turn on the pinball machine, it was finally Tommy's turn. He stepped up to the behemoth pinball machine and put his hands to the side buttons that would control the rubber-lined flippers. Unlike his practice pinball, they were in good condition, strong and responsive. It was obvious that these flippers could propel the ball at lightening speed to the top of the machine. Smooth and shiny, the heavy silver balls raced around the Jurassic Park obstacle course, smashing into bumpers and being propelled with new life faster than they could be seen. Tommy got ready for the first ball.

Pulling the shooter back against it's tight spring, Tommy let go and watched as it crashed head on into the ball, propelling it up the shooting ramp and into the Jurassic Park playing field. Momentum died and gravity began to take over, the ball dropping into the array of bumpers and traps that adorned its descent. Not only was Jurassic Park the ultimate in difficult pinball machines, but the pressure of the competition and the spectators were making him extremely nervous.

There are many different types of pinball machines, but a favorite among many people is Jurassic Park pinball. Pinball has been around since the 1930s, and is still common in any arcade. Many people also like to keep pinball machines in their basements for play or for collector’s items. There are also people who love restoring old pinball machines.

Pinball machines can be found in not only arcades, but in many different restaurants or pizza parlors. Most of them are coin operated. Pinball machines are large items, that include huge inclined surfaces. The surface is inclined so that the metal balls that are used for pinball are able to easily roll down the surface. The first step of the game is for you to first pull a lever that shoots a metal ball to the top of the inclined surface. As gravity takes over, the ball will roll back down to you. As the ball is rolling down the surface, you press buttons on both sides of the machine to flick levers that will hit the metal balls as they roll. The flicking motion will send the balls flying back up to the top. As the balls are flicked or falling, they will hit different stationary objects scattered throughout the inclined surface. As the balls hit these stationary objects, you will earn points. You never want to let the ball roll all the way down to the bottom of the inclined surface. If this happens three times, the game is over.

Data East Pinball is a pinball game machine company. They are the creators of Jurassic Park pinball. Jurassic Park pinball is based on the movie Jurassic Park, and follows the same theme. In the movie, a group of scientists decide to recreate living dinosaurs and put them on an island to create a theme park called Jurassic Park. The park’s security system breaks down in the movie and the dinosaurs are left to run wild, which is quite an adventure for the humans on the island.

In Jurassic Park pinball, there are eleven different playing modes. The first playing mode is “Stampede” and the second is “Escape Jurassic Park.” The third is “Raptor Two-Ball.” With “Raptor Two-Ball” there is an extra object you can hit the ball into to add extra points to your score. The fourth game play mode is “Electric Fence.” With “Electric Fence” there is a boy name Timmy standing on an electric fence and you have to hit the bumpers a certain number of times to get him off. The fifth mode is called “Ball Attack” and the sixth is “System Boot.” In “System Boot” you have to shoot three different types of scoops to earn points. “System Boot” can earn you up to 30 million points.

“Raptor’s Rampage,” “Mosquito Millions,” “Bone Busting,” “Light Extra Ball,” and “Feed T-Rex” are the other game playing modes available to you. If you complete all of the previously mentioned game play modes, Jurassic Park pinball will take you to the last mode which is called “System Failure.” In “System Failure,” there are six balls, and all shots are worth one million points. This only lasts for forty five seconds.

   Balsa wood makes excellent rubber band airplanes. Play with plastic scale figurines with your children.