Compara los precios de Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Collection 2 (DLC) en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Zen Studios. Publicado por Zen Studios. Lanzado el 13/4/2023. Disponible en Xbox Series X, Xbox One, Xbox. Géneros: Simulation, Free To Play.

Three classic Williams tables rebuilt in digital form - Medieval Madness, Junk Yard, and Sorcerer. Faithful recreations for pinball purists, but the free-to-play shell has rough edges.

Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Collection 2 is a DLC pack for Zen Studios' Pinball FX platform, adding three digitally recreated tables originally designed by Williams Electronics: Medieval Madness, Junk Yard, and Sorcerer. These are not original Zen designs - they are licensed reproductions of physical machines that carry serious reputation in real-world pinball circles. Medieval Madness in particular is consistently rated among the greatest pinball machines ever manufactured, so the stakes for getting the physics right are high. For the most part, Zen delivers a credible simulation. Ball behavior, flipper response, and ramp geometry feel close enough to the originals that people who have played the physical cabinets will recognize the flow states these tables are designed to produce. From a mechanical depth standpoint, each table has a distinct identity. Medieval Madness rewards multi-ball aggression and castle destruction sequencing. Junk Yard is messier and more chaotic, built around collecting car parts toward a final confrontation with Boney - a table that rewards learning its specific shot map over dozens of sessions. Sorcerer is the oldest design of the three and shows it, with a simpler rule set that works as a decent entry point for players new to Williams-era design logic. If you are approaching these tables as a newcomer to digital pinball, Sorcerer is where you start, Medieval Madness is where you stay the longest, and Junk Yard is what you return to once you think you understand the other two. The platform context matters here. Pinball FX runs a free-to-play structure where tables are purchased individually or in packs, and that architecture introduces friction. The interface is built around a storefront first and a game second, which means menus feel cluttered and the onboarding for new players is weaker than it should be. There is no unified tutorial that contextualizes Williams-era table design - you are dropped in with a brief objectives list and expected to figure out the rule sheets yourself. Experienced players will not care, but anyone coming in cold deserves better guidance on what they are actually trying to accomplish on a table like Sorcerer. The mixed review score on Steam reflects a divide in the player base. Long-time Pinball FX fans who migrated from previous platform versions faced a content repurchase situation that generated real frustration, and that sentiment bleeds into the ratings. The tables themselves, evaluated as standalone digital recreations, hold up well. Physics fidelity is solid, the visual presentation is clean without overselling the fantasy elements, and the competitive leaderboard integration gives score-chasers something to chase across all three machines. On Xbox Series X the load times are fast and the frame rate is consistent, which matters more than it sounds for a game where timing windows are measured in milliseconds. For strategy-minded players who care about decision trees and optimization, pinball might seem like a shallow category. It is not. Learning the rule set of Medieval Madness well enough to reliably sequence its major modes is a genuine systems-mastery exercise. The question of shot priority, risk management around drain angles, and understanding which modes stack are all decisions with meaningful consequences. It scratches a similar itch to routing optimization in other simulation genres, just compressed into three-minute sessions. If you already own Collection 1 and enjoyed it, this pack is a straightforward addition. If you are new to the platform and Williams tables specifically, this is a reasonable starting point as long as you accept that the storefront experience around the actual game is more annoying than it needs to be. Diego, Scout Team

Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Collection 2 (DLC)
SimulationFree To Play

Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Collection 2 (DLC)

13 abr 2023Zen Studios
GamerScout opina

Three classic Williams tables rebuilt in digital form - Medieval Madness, Junk Yard, and Sorcerer. Faithful recreations for pinball purists, but the free-to-play shell has rough edges.

Xbox Series XXbox OneXbox
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold
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Acerca de Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Collection 2 (DLC)

Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Collection 2 is a DLC pack for Zen Studios' Pinball FX platform, adding three digitally recreated tables originally designed by Williams Electronics: Medieval Madness, Junk Yard, and Sorcerer. These are not original Zen designs - they are licensed reproductions of physical machines that carry serious reputation in real-world pinball circles. Medieval Madness in particular is consistently rated among the greatest pinball machines ever manufactured, so the stakes for getting the physics right are high. For the most part, Zen delivers a credible simulation. Ball behavior, flipper response, and ramp geometry feel close enough to the originals that people who have played the physical cabinets will recognize the flow states these tables are designed to produce. From a mechanical depth standpoint, each table has a distinct identity. Medieval Madness rewards multi-ball aggression and castle destruction sequencing. Junk Yard is messier and more chaotic, built around collecting car parts toward a final confrontation with Boney - a table that rewards learning its specific shot map over dozens of sessions. Sorcerer is the oldest design of the three and shows it, with a simpler rule set that works as a decent entry point for players new to Williams-era design logic. If you are approaching these tables as a newcomer to digital pinball, Sorcerer is where you start, Medieval Madness is where you stay the longest, and Junk Yard is what you return to once you think you understand the other two. The platform context matters here. Pinball FX runs a free-to-play structure where tables are purchased individually or in packs, and that architecture introduces friction. The interface is built around a storefront first and a game second, which means menus feel cluttered and the onboarding for new players is weaker than it should be. There is no unified tutorial that contextualizes Williams-era table design - you are dropped in with a brief objectives list and expected to figure out the rule sheets yourself. Experienced players will not care, but anyone coming in cold deserves better guidance on what they are actually trying to accomplish on a table like Sorcerer. The mixed review score on Steam reflects a divide in the player base. Long-time Pinball FX fans who migrated from previous platform versions faced a content repurchase situation that generated real frustration, and that sentiment bleeds into the ratings. The tables themselves, evaluated as standalone digital recreations, hold up well. Physics fidelity is solid, the visual presentation is clean without overselling the fantasy elements, and the competitive leaderboard integration gives score-chasers something to chase across all three machines. On Xbox Series X the load times are fast and the frame rate is consistent, which matters more than it sounds for a game where timing windows are measured in milliseconds. For strategy-minded players who care about decision trees and optimization, pinball might seem like a shallow category. It is not. Learning the rule set of Medieval Madness well enough to reliably sequence its major modes is a genuine systems-mastery exercise. The question of shot priority, risk management around drain angles, and understanding which modes stack are all decisions with meaningful consequences. It scratches a similar itch to routing optimization in other simulation genres, just compressed into three-minute sessions. If you already own Collection 1 and enjoyed it, this pack is a straightforward addition. If you are new to the platform and Williams tables specifically, this is a reasonable starting point as long as you accept that the storefront experience around the actual game is more annoying than it needs to be.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

xboxDigital PinballWilliams TablesScore AttackLeaderboard CompetitionTable SimulationPhysics-BasedSingle Session Play

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10 64bit
Processor
Intel Core i5-2500K@3.3GHz or AMD FX 6300@3.5GHz / Intel Core i7-4770K@3.5GHz or Ryzen 5 1500X@3.5GHz
Memory
16 GB RAM Graph…

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Processor
Intel Core i7-7700K or Ryzen 5 1600
Graphics
Nvidia 2060 RTX or AMD RX 5600 XT

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Steam
73%(2,623)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Zen Studios
Distribuidora
Zen Studios
Fecha de lanzamiento
13 abr 2023

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Collection 2 (DLC)?

Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Collection 2 (DLC) está disponible en Xbox Series X, Xbox One, Xbox.

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Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Collection 2 (DLC) se lanzó el 13 de abril de 2023.

¿Quién desarrolló Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Collection 2 (DLC)?

Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Collection 2 (DLC) fue desarrollado por Zen Studios.