Compare Pinball FX - Williams Pinball: Twilight Zone prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Zen Studios. Published by Zen Studios. Released on 4/13/2023. Available on Xbox Series X, Xbox One, Xbox. Genres: Casual, Simulation.

A faithful digital recreation of the legendary 1993 Williams Twilight Zone pinball table, now inside Pinball FX. Rod Serling's weirdest cabinet gets a second life on Xbox.

Pinball FX - Williams Pinball: Twilight Zone is a licensed simulation of the 1993 Williams physical table, widely regarded among collectors as one of the most mechanically complex pinball machines ever manufactured. If you know the original, you already understand the reputation: a gumball machine, a power ball, a mini-playfield, magnets that actively redirect your ball mid-flight, and a ruleset deep enough that dedicated players spent years untangling it. Zen Studios' job here is to translate all of that into a pixel-faithful digital package, and for the most part they pull it off without embarrassing themselves. From a simulation standpoint, the physics feel close enough to keep real-world players honest. The magnet behaviour under the playfield is the centerpiece mechanic and it works correctly, yanking your ball sideways at inconvenient moments just like the cabinet does. Multiball modes, the slot machine jackpot sequences, and the Power Ball substitution all behave consistently with documented rules. Scoring strategy on the Twilight Zone table rewards understanding mode stacking and Spiral Attack sequencing, and none of that has been flattened out for casual play. Purists will notice the Zen audio mix leans slightly louder and crisper than the original dot-matrix era soundboard, but that is a small concession to modern speakers. Where this release runs into friction is scope and context. The table is sold as a standalone DLC inside the Pinball FX ecosystem, meaning you need the base client installed first. The Pinball FX client itself has had a bumpy critical reception since its relaunch, and some of that frustration bleeds into table-level reviews even when the table itself is blameless. The review count on Xbox is thin - 19 reviews total at time of writing - so the 79% positive score reflects a small and self-selected audience rather than a broad sample. If you are buying specifically for Twilight Zone and understand pinball table economics, the score is a less useful signal than usual. For newcomers to the table: the Twilight Zone is genuinely hard. Its ruleset predates the era when manufacturers simplified mode structures for wider audiences, and casual one-handed play will not reveal most of what makes it interesting. Zen provides the usual camera options and difficulty assists, but there is no tutorial that walks you through spiral sequences or explains why you should always feed the gumball machine before starting Powerball Mania. If you are new to simulation pinball, start elsewhere and come back when you have built muscle memory. If you have already put hours into Zen's Medieval Madness or Attack from Mars recreations and are ready for the table that collectors call the Mount Everest of pinball, this is exactly the correct next purchase. The mod ecosystem for Pinball FX on Xbox is effectively nonexistent compared to what PC players have via Steam Workshop, so console owners get the table as shipped with no community alterations. Online leaderboards work and provide the only real long-term competitive hook outside of personal score chasing. There are no multiplayer modes beyond asynchronous score comparison, which is standard for the genre but worth noting if you were hoping for head-to-head sessions. Bottom line: a technically competent recreation of a historically significant table, sold to the audience that already knows why the Twilight Zone machine commands four-figure prices at auction. If that sentence describes you, stop reading and go load it up. Diego, Scout Team

Pinball FX - Williams Pinball: Twilight Zone
CasualSimulation

Pinball FX - Williams Pinball: Twilight Zone

Apr 13, 2023Zen Studios
GamerScout Says

A faithful digital recreation of the legendary 1993 Williams Twilight Zone pinball table, now inside Pinball FX. Rod Serling's weirdest cabinet gets a second life on Xbox.

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About Pinball FX - Williams Pinball: Twilight Zone

Pinball FX - Williams Pinball: Twilight Zone is a licensed simulation of the 1993 Williams physical table, widely regarded among collectors as one of the most mechanically complex pinball machines ever manufactured. If you know the original, you already understand the reputation: a gumball machine, a power ball, a mini-playfield, magnets that actively redirect your ball mid-flight, and a ruleset deep enough that dedicated players spent years untangling it. Zen Studios' job here is to translate all of that into a pixel-faithful digital package, and for the most part they pull it off without embarrassing themselves. From a simulation standpoint, the physics feel close enough to keep real-world players honest. The magnet behaviour under the playfield is the centerpiece mechanic and it works correctly, yanking your ball sideways at inconvenient moments just like the cabinet does. Multiball modes, the slot machine jackpot sequences, and the Power Ball substitution all behave consistently with documented rules. Scoring strategy on the Twilight Zone table rewards understanding mode stacking and Spiral Attack sequencing, and none of that has been flattened out for casual play. Purists will notice the Zen audio mix leans slightly louder and crisper than the original dot-matrix era soundboard, but that is a small concession to modern speakers. Where this release runs into friction is scope and context. The table is sold as a standalone DLC inside the Pinball FX ecosystem, meaning you need the base client installed first. The Pinball FX client itself has had a bumpy critical reception since its relaunch, and some of that frustration bleeds into table-level reviews even when the table itself is blameless. The review count on Xbox is thin - 19 reviews total at time of writing - so the 79% positive score reflects a small and self-selected audience rather than a broad sample. If you are buying specifically for Twilight Zone and understand pinball table economics, the score is a less useful signal than usual. For newcomers to the table: the Twilight Zone is genuinely hard. Its ruleset predates the era when manufacturers simplified mode structures for wider audiences, and casual one-handed play will not reveal most of what makes it interesting. Zen provides the usual camera options and difficulty assists, but there is no tutorial that walks you through spiral sequences or explains why you should always feed the gumball machine before starting Powerball Mania. If you are new to simulation pinball, start elsewhere and come back when you have built muscle memory. If you have already put hours into Zen's Medieval Madness or Attack from Mars recreations and are ready for the table that collectors call the Mount Everest of pinball, this is exactly the correct next purchase. The mod ecosystem for Pinball FX on Xbox is effectively nonexistent compared to what PC players have via Steam Workshop, so console owners get the table as shipped with no community alterations. Online leaderboards work and provide the only real long-term competitive hook outside of personal score chasing. There are no multiplayer modes beyond asynchronous score comparison, which is standard for the genre but worth noting if you were hoping for head-to-head sessions. Bottom line: a technically competent recreation of a historically significant table, sold to the audience that already knows why the Twilight Zone machine commands four-figure prices at auction. If that sentence describes you, stop reading and go load it up. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

xboxPinball SimulationLicensed TableScore ChasingLeaderboardSingle PlayerPhysics-BasedClassic ArcadeHigh Skill Ceiling

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
79%(19)

Game Info

Developer
Zen Studios
Publisher
Zen Studios
Release Date
Apr 13, 2023

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