Compare Hot Pinball Thrills prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Fancy Bytes, Reactor. Published by United Independent Entertainment. Released on 6/26/2015. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Simulation, Sports.

Three budget pinball tables with mixed community reception and floaty physics - approach this one with calibrated expectations, not arcade nostalgia.

My spreadsheet instinct kicked in the moment I saw the numbers: roughly 27 Steam user reviews sitting at a near-even split, under 35 MB installed, three tables total. That data profile tells you almost everything you need to know before the ball even drops. Hot Pinball Thrills is a micro-budget PC pinball package from Fancy Bytes and Reactor, built around three themed tables - Car Wash, Moulin Rouge, and Beach - with multiple camera angles, full controller support, and Steam Leaderboards rounding out a feature list that is genuinely modest but complete enough for the format. The physics are where the community argument lives. A vocal portion of players describe ball movement as floaty and inconsistent, with the ball occasionally clipping through bumpers and flippers behaving in ways that feel disconnected from real table weight. Ramp hits - the core feedback loop that makes pinball satisfying - reportedly register too rarely on certain layouts, particularly the Moulin Rouge table, which reviewers identify as the weakest of the three. The Car Wash table gets slightly warmer treatment, and if you are going to put time into any of the three, that seems to be the consensus starting point. Sound design is another area of consistent criticism: effects are thin and largely recycled across all tables, which flattens the sensory feedback that good pinball relies on. To be fair to the game, the tables do feature animated flippers, bumpers, rails, and kickers, and the 2.5D visual style has a certain clean, colorful readability to it. Controller support works without fuss, which matters more than it sounds for a genre where input latency and button feel are half the experience. The multiple camera angles give you some freedom to find a viewing position that suits your playstyle, similar to the old Windows Space Cadet approach of locking a full-table view. If your benchmark is that 1990s freeware era of PC pinball rather than the simulation depth of Pinball FX or the table authenticity of The Pinball Arcade, your tolerance for the rough edges here will be meaningfully higher. For anyone who takes pinball seriously as a simulation genre, this is not the right purchase. The table count is low, the physics feedback loop is unreliable, and there is no campaign structure, mission system, or progression mechanic to build sessions around - just score chasing on three static layouts. There is no mod support and no post-launch content to speak of. The game is part of a trilogy alongside Fantastic Pinball Thrills and Soccer Pinball Thrills, all sharing the same underlying engine and the same core criticisms; buying the bundle does not meaningfully change the value proposition, it just multiplies the table count across identical physics. Diego, Scout Team

Hot Pinball Thrills
CasualSimulationSports

Hot Pinball Thrills

Jun 26, 2015Fancy Bytes, ReactorUnited Independent Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Three budget pinball tables with mixed community reception and floaty physics - approach this one with calibrated expectations, not arcade nostalgia.

PC
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Historical low: $2.06

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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Hot Pinball Thrills

My spreadsheet instinct kicked in the moment I saw the numbers: roughly 27 Steam user reviews sitting at a near-even split, under 35 MB installed, three tables total. That data profile tells you almost everything you need to know before the ball even drops. Hot Pinball Thrills is a micro-budget PC pinball package from Fancy Bytes and Reactor, built around three themed tables - Car Wash, Moulin Rouge, and Beach - with multiple camera angles, full controller support, and Steam Leaderboards rounding out a feature list that is genuinely modest but complete enough for the format. The physics are where the community argument lives. A vocal portion of players describe ball movement as floaty and inconsistent, with the ball occasionally clipping through bumpers and flippers behaving in ways that feel disconnected from real table weight. Ramp hits - the core feedback loop that makes pinball satisfying - reportedly register too rarely on certain layouts, particularly the Moulin Rouge table, which reviewers identify as the weakest of the three. The Car Wash table gets slightly warmer treatment, and if you are going to put time into any of the three, that seems to be the consensus starting point. Sound design is another area of consistent criticism: effects are thin and largely recycled across all tables, which flattens the sensory feedback that good pinball relies on. To be fair to the game, the tables do feature animated flippers, bumpers, rails, and kickers, and the 2.5D visual style has a certain clean, colorful readability to it. Controller support works without fuss, which matters more than it sounds for a genre where input latency and button feel are half the experience. The multiple camera angles give you some freedom to find a viewing position that suits your playstyle, similar to the old Windows Space Cadet approach of locking a full-table view. If your benchmark is that 1990s freeware era of PC pinball rather than the simulation depth of Pinball FX or the table authenticity of The Pinball Arcade, your tolerance for the rough edges here will be meaningfully higher. For anyone who takes pinball seriously as a simulation genre, this is not the right purchase. The table count is low, the physics feedback loop is unreliable, and there is no campaign structure, mission system, or progression mechanic to build sessions around - just score chasing on three static layouts. There is no mod support and no post-launch content to speak of. The game is part of a trilogy alongside Fantastic Pinball Thrills and Soccer Pinball Thrills, all sharing the same underlying engine and the same core criticisms; buying the bundle does not meaningfully change the value proposition, it just multiplies the table count across identical physics. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayercontroller-supporttier:sub-5Budget PinballScore Chasing3-Table PackFloaty Physics2.5D PinballController-ReadyNo Progression SystemCasual Time-Killer

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP / Vista / 7 / 8 / 10 / 11
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
100 MB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce 6x, AMD Radeon HD 4x
Processor
2.3 GHz Dual Core (Intel Core 2 Duo, AMD Athlon X2)

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Game Info

Developer
Fancy Bytes, Reactor
Publisher
United Independent Entertainment
Release Date
Jun 26, 2015

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Price History

2026-06-102.06(lowest)
2026-06-092.06(lowest)

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What platforms is Hot Pinball Thrills available on?

Hot Pinball Thrills is available on PC.

When was Hot Pinball Thrills released?

Hot Pinball Thrills was released on 26 June 2015.

Who developed Hot Pinball Thrills?

Hot Pinball Thrills was developed by Fancy Bytes, Reactor and published by United Independent Entertainment.