Tag: season 4

  • Heather and Mike S. Win Super-Ball IV

    Regular readers know I am a strong believer in the adage “better late than never.” So with the new season beginning in just a few hours, what better time to report on May’s post-season Zen (split flipper) tournament? Look, I went to Europe almost right afterward on important philosopher business. And then the rest of June I… er… nevermind, let’s talk about the tournament.

    A row of Zen hopefuls.
    A row of Zen hopefuls.

    Super-Ball is a tradition that goes back to the first season of the Lansing Pinball League: a post-season, just-for-fun, tournament in which people are partnered up and each take one flipper.  Since attendance was low, Mike S. suggested a round robin tournament instead of the previous double elimination bracket, followed by a final best-of-three playoff between the teams with the best record.  Teams were formed by pairing the top seed with the low seed, the second-highest with second-lowest, and so on.

    An odd number of participants left us with a problem which Mike S. resolved by suggesting that the lowest seed could be on two teams.  The lowest seed, Greg, didn’t want to be on two teams, fearing he would have to stay too late.  Matt made an executive decision: since it was Mike’s idea, Mike would be on two teams.  Mike S. ended up paired with both me and Mike B.

    Zen tournaments are as fun to watch as to play in.
    Zen tournaments are as fun to watch as to play in.

    Naturally this ended up with the most ridiculous possible situation.  Both Mike S. teams ended up playing each other in the finals.  Mike S. promised he would not favor either team but would play his best in each case, and he played the same flipper with each person.  As a result the “Mike factor” was equalized as much as possible and it pitted me against Mike B. in a sort of grudge match, since Mike B. was the one to knock me out of the end-of-season playoffs in B division.  Mike S. and I ended up narrowly edging out Mike S. and Mike B. to take home the trophies.

    Mike S. and Mike B. playing
    Chris calculates what went wrong for his team while others watch Mike B. and Mike S. playing one of the final games.

    The trophies this time were topped with pseudo-Grecian athletes holding laurel wreaths.  I have named mine “Alcibiades.”

    Afterward there was a Theio’s after-party, which Chris failed to show up at despite promising he would get to Theio’s at least once this season.  We’ll have to get him in Season 5.

    Mike S. and Mike B.
    Mike S. and Mike B. challenging Mike S. and me for the trophy.
    Mike S. and Mike B. finishing a ball.
    Nothing beats the wonderful feeling of accomplishment you get from ending a ball!

    As usual, you can find more photos in the photo gallery.  See you next season!

  • Results of Season 4 Final Tournament

    A Division

    1. Chris
    2. Alex
    3. Aaron
    4. Sarah
    5. Mike S.
    6. Jake
    7. Joseph
    8. Matt P.

    B Division

    1. Danny
    2. Mike B.
    3. Heather
    4. James
    5. Mark
    6. Greg
  • Final Standings for Season 4

    The final results for Season 4 were determined by a double elimination tournament. Those not attending the final tournament are ranked below the tournament participants.

    1. Chris
    2. Alex
    3. Aaron
    4. Sarah
    5. Mike S.
    6. Jake
    7. Joseph
    8. Matt P.
    9. Danny
    10. Mike B.
    11. Heather
    12. James
    13. Mark
    14. Greg
    15. Sam
    16. Russell
    17. Matt W.
    18. Eric
    19. Corey
    20. Avik
    21. Tim
    22. Shane
    23. Kristen
    24. Craig
  • League Night Recap for 4/21/15 (and preview for 5/5/15)

    April 21 was the eighth and final regular season meeting for Season 4.  As Addams Family had been repaired, and in keeping with the tradition of always playing games that are new (or in this case, newly returned) to the Avenue, it was selected to be one of the league games for the night.  World Cup Soccer did not repeat the mid-game resetting issue that had hit Joseph and me three times in a row during our previous night’s practice, so it made the cut too.  Indiana Jones, on the other hand, was now resetting instead (I blame the gremlin), so it got turned off and removed from the night’s lineup.  Also in the mix for the night were Getaway and Medieval Madness.

    Greg
    Greg wants you to know he is definitely not up to no good.

    We had not played Medieval Madness in a while and I was glad, but nervous.  Although it had once been my best game, in recent times I have been in something of a slump.  I decided to play a practice game on it.  This broke my superstitious rule against playing a game in practice that I’m going to play in league (a good game in practice seems to predict a bad game in league), but I decided it was worth it to check on how the ball was hitting the flippers today.  Then my game started going on a while.  Then I hit a replay.  Then I was on the fifth castle.  “Joseph,” I yelled with genuine dismay, “my game is going too well.”  Afterward, Mike S. reminded me that I had broken the rule against practicing games before league play.  I tried to brush it off with a show of optimism.

    Mark surprised me, Matt, and Joseph with some gifts from his pinball memorabilia collection.  He had promotional plastics from The Machine: Bride of Pin-Bot and Fish Tales, and gave Matt first choice, with the suggestion that he could use it as a prize for the Zen Tournament.  Matt chose Fish Tales, so Mark presented me with the Bride.  I was delighted to have it, as I quite like that game, and touched by Mark’s generosity.  He was apologetic because he had once offered to give me the plastic Rudy head that he knew he had somewhere, but ultimately was not able to find it.  I told him it was just as well, because my brother had given me that very Rudy for Christmas.  (It now sits on a shelf in my office, where it provides silent backup and moral support.  My officemate has not yet complained of nightmares.)

    Alex
    “Um, Alex, I think Chris was just messing with you when he told you about the secret upper flipper buttons.”

    Mark also had a small gift for Joseph: his very own pinball.  Unfortunately, he has not figured out any way to add it to The Simpsons to make his own multiball.

    Medieval Madness, or as I called it afterward, “Medieval Sadness,” proved to be cruel to a lot of people.  Before I stepped up to play, Joseph tried to calm my nerves by pointing out that Chris had managed a score of around 11 million.  Lucky Chris.  I managed to get a score of about four and a half million – just about exactly a tenth of the score I had done during my practice game.  I try not to be so superstitious, but circumstances keep encouraging me like that.  I was so dismayed to end my night and my season on such a disappointing game that I almost went home without going to Theio’s, but Joseph convinced me I should go anyway and after a short time of chatting with the rest of the Theio’s regulars (minus Mike S., who had to leave early) I felt back to my old self.

    Russell at the bar
    Russell fueling up.

    The regular season ended with Alex taking first place back, Chris knocked to second, and Matt P. in third.  This is the first time the season has ever finished without Chris in first place, but this is also the first time final rankings will be determined by playoffs.  In the first three seasons, the final rankings were based entirely on the number of points earned during the eight regular meetings.  The end-of-season “Zen” (split flipper) tournament was just for fun.  This time around, prompted by a suggestion from Mike S., we will instead have a double elimination tournament.  Seeds will be based on points earned during the regular season; the tie for fifth will be resolved by a one-ball tiebreaker between Joseph and Aaron prior to the start of play.  A division will be the top eight seeds, and everyone else will play in B division.

    Will Chris manage to battle back to first place, and continue his undefeated reign over the Lansing Pinball League?  Or will he have to hand his pinball crown to Alex?  There is going to be a crown, right?  Does B division get a tiara instead?  Find out the answer to these questions and many others on Tuesday at the first ever Lansing Pinball League final tournament!  You can view the seeds for the final tournament by checking the most recent results and sorting by overall standing.

  • Results for League Night #8, Season 4, 4/21/15

    [table id=17 /]

    The points are now final for the regular season.  Final positions will be determined by playoffs on May 5.  Players receiving 0 for the week were absent.

  • Results for League Night #7, Season 4, 4/7/15

    [table id=16 /]

    Those receiving 0 for the week were absent.

  • League Night Preview: 4/7/15

    Hard to believe it’s already time for another league night – the seventh of Season 4.  Here is the (very) tentative list of games (and a couple of notes about maintenance issues):

    • Theatre of Magic: watch out for Midnight, because the magnet likes to drop the ball straight down the middle.
    • World Cup Soccer
    • The Addams Family: I will be surprised if this actually gets played, since it is still intermittently suffering from the ball-loading problem.
    • Tales of the Arabian Nights: skill shot is still not working, but no one cares besides Joseph and me.
    • Medieval Madness (if more than 16 players)

    Matt will be gone again this time, so I presume Aaron will preside over the revelry like Dionysus in a hoodie. Sadly, Joseph and I will also be gone, our first absence since joining the league. (I had to buy tickets to a concert before our league season was scheduled and I knew there was a 50/50 chance I would end up missing a league night… and I got unlucky. Sniff…) Here’s hoping someone gets some good pictures they can pass on to me for the blog.

    7 p.m. tomorrow (Tuesday 4/7), the Avenue: be there, even though I won’t!

  • League Night Recap for 3/24/15

    For the sixth meeting of Season 4, we were slated to play Austin Powers, Getaway, Indiana Jones, and Lord of the Rings, with Attack from Mars as the contingency game for a turnout over 16.  I knew this was almost certainly not going to happen because Austin Powers had still been unplayable when I visited the Avenue the night before.  For weeks now, a ball has been stuck in the bonus lanes due to a bit of debris lodged there.  All it would take to fix would be for someone to open the glass and clear the lane, so I can’t understand why it hadn’t been fixed yet (and still hasn’t, as of Friday night).  Meanwhile, Addams Family was back, but could not be played either due to intermittently failing to load balls even after a ball search.  Since exactly 16 people showed up (a close enough call that people kept re-counting), we only needed to play four games, so Attack from Mars ended up replacing Austin Powers.  No one wept.

    Mike watches Russell play.
    “Huh. So the key is to slide the game ten inches, then swear a lot. I have so much to learn.”

    I got put into a group with Joseph, Matt P., and Greg, which brought back memories of Season 1, when we were all regulars in a smaller league.  I hadn’t been grouped with Joseph in quite some time.  The highlight of our group’s play for the night was Matt destroying the Ring, which managed to overshadow my own game of Lord of the Rings which, while not up to wizard standards, was very good by my own lights.  I need to learn not to talk while I play, though.  I almost always lose concentration, followed by my ball.  At one point I had a Gollum multiball going and was tearing things up, then decided it would be funny to reply to one of Gollum’s utterances with “Shut up, Gollum, I’m trying to concentrate!”  I was well aware of the irony when my blathering distracted me just enough to cause a double drain.

    Our group’s night ended with an unfortunate incident on Getaway wherein we had to replay the game due to a slam tilt.  This one was decreed to be no one’s fault; the ball got stuck in the lock during Greg’s game, and the slam tilt happened when Matt tried to dislodge it for him.  We replayed without incident, but a little while later, another bit of bad luck happened as Indiana Jones decided to break at the end of Chris’s game.  The idol rotor lock decided it wanted to keep all the balls for itself and could not be coaxed to spit any out.  The game has, unfortunately, been broken ever since, which has stopped James from being able to do a makeup for his missed league game.

    Joseph plays Getaway.
    “Maybe I’d better read over the rules one more time… hmmm…”

    Earlier in the night, Jake had told me that he would have to bow out of Theio’s this time, as he and Sam had tickets for a punk show at Mac’s Bar.  Eventually he talked Mike S. into going too.  By the time my league games were over, the two of them were already long gone.  Joseph and I stuck around playing games with Greg until I got a call from Mike.  The show was over and he and Jake were at Theio’s; did we want to meet them there?  We finished up a game of Theatre of Magic, Greg bowed out, and Joseph and I headed to Theio’s.  When we arrived, we found the trio looking rather worse for wear.  Jake informed me that he could barely hear anything I was saying over the ringing in his ears.  Mike’s face was bright red and he was acting a bit addled.  Sam was mostly quiet and seemed worn out, though seemed the best off of the bunch, perhaps indicating he went a bit less crazy at the show.  Evidently it was rather exciting.  According to Jake, Mike had managed to get up front and stay there through the entire show, hanging onto a lighting rig or something to keep himself from being swept back by the crowd.  Mike showed off some spectacular bruises from the adventure, in between eagerly shoveling Eggs Louie (which he kept calling an “omelet” even as Jake insisted that it was certainly not an omelet) into his face.

    Matt gets a beer at the bar.
    It’s PBR time.

    Eventually, after quite a bit of lingering over midnight brunch, we all went our separate ways, and that was the end of another fun-filled league night.  Although Matt P. had an impressive first place finish two weeks in a row, Chris did well enough to regain his top spot in the season rankings and knock Alex down to second.  As always, you can see the complete results here (pending James’s makeup game on Indiana Jones) and I have a few more photos up in the gallery too.  Though I usually end by saying “see you next time,” I’m very sorry to say I can’t do that this time.  Joseph and I will be missing Tuesday’s meeting to go see Walk the Moon in Detroit – my first absence since joining the league.  So I’ll end with this instead.  Hey Walk the Moon: you had better play a damn good show, because I am missing pinball for you.  I expect to hear “Anna Sun” at least three times.

  • League Night Preview: 3/24/15

    It’s that time again (or at least it will be in about four hours): time for the sixth meeting of the fourth season of the League. Our benevolent pinball king, Matt P., tentatively selected the following games:

    • Lord of the Rings
    • Austin Powers
    • Indiana Jones
    • Getaway
    • Attack from Mars (if more than 16 players show up)

    We haven’t played Lord of the Rings once this season, mostly because it was confused and giving out unearned multiballs and jackpots for a while, and I suspect certain parties will be happy to see it return.  Austin Powers is almost certainly not going to get played as it was still disabled last night. (A ball has gotten lodged in one of the bonus lanes by some debris that’s fallen there and until that’s cleared, it’s unplayable.) Addams Family has just made a surprising return to the Avenue and we usually will play any game that’s new, but it’s also unlikely that it will end up in rotation since it is intermittently failing to load balls.

    Will Chris regain his #1 position?  Will anything get slam tilted?  Will Addams Family be playable?  Will we be able to see our hands in front of our faces?  Will Austin Powers just explode already?  These and many other mysteries will be solved tonight at 7 p.m. at the Avenue!

  • League Night Recap for 3/10/15

    March 10th was the fifth meeting of Season 4, and it seemed as though a lot of people were feeling a bit off their games and disappointed with their own performance.  The absence once again of our beloved leader Matt P. (on a trip to visit family during Spring Break) as well as other regulars including the everpresent Mike S. (gone early to PAPA) may have contributed to an atmosphere that was rather subdued.  Perhaps PAPA nerves were shadowing others; Alex and Chris were in attendance but getting ready to leave for PAPA in a few days.  We did have a couple of new players (Corey and Tim) to help fill in the gaps and bring some energy to things.

    Alex, Sarah, and Chris
    Alex and Sarah warm up on Getaway, and Chris practices his slam tilt Junk Yard.

    The show must go on, however, and Aaron reprised his duties as Matt’s second, getting things organized and underway.  Instead of the famous Sorting Hat or the newer computerized method of drawing groups for the night, Aaron hit on the clever idea of having everyone draw playing cards, and afterward announcing which cards went with which machine.  Aaron once again sent people to move counterclockwise through the games, but this was quickly sent awry by at least one group thinking we were to move clockwise; for the rest of the night people ended up jumping on whatever table was free at the moment.

    We had been scheduled to play Monster Bash, Junk Yard, The Simpsons Pinball Party, and Tales of the Arabian Nights.  Prior to the start of play, I decided to practice starting Mosh Pit Multiball on Monster Bash and see how often I was successful.  This was prompted by having it as a goal at a pingolf tourney, and realizing that it wasn’t as hard as I’d thought, especially if I focused all my efforts on it.  It turned out that in several practice games at the Avenue prior to league play, I only failed to start it once, so I resolved to try that as a new strategy.  Later I saw Chris trying out Monster Bash too and I told him, “I have a new strategy for this one: shoot up the middle.”  He said, “Thanks, Heather, I can always rely on you.”  If his voice had been any more laden with sarcasm, the words would have fallen and crashed through the glass.

    During his practice game, Chris determined that the scoop was shooting down the middle all too often.  He convinced Aaron that Monster Bash should be removed from the rotation.  I was none too pleased by this and began, well, wailing might overstate it.  I’d spent all my warmup time practicing that Mosh Pit Multiball!  Alas, but Aaron’s word was law for the night and so the switch was made, Monster Bash for Attack from Mars.

    Players warming up
    No witticisms here: just some folks warming up for league play.

    I ended up in a group with Sam and Chris, starting out with Tales of the Arabian Nights.  Chris urged us to hurry so we could get our game started while there was still light in the pinball alcove.  This was definitely sage advice, since TotAN is the worst game to play when the room is dark.  It makes you want to get out the glow sticks, as Matt P. once said.  I had a really good ball one in which I got quite a lot of lamp spinning going and had a multiball with two jackpots, to the tune of eight-odd million.  Sadly my next two balls only totaled about one million points between them and that was almost all my held bonus.  Still, I started out the night with a bit of confidence, which was quickly dampened by a mediocre-to-bad Attack from Mars.

    While we were playing Attack from Mars, a new player, Tim, arrived.  He had come late to the league meeting but had been added to my group.  While Chris and Sam played, I tried to show Tim the basics of pinball with a credit someone had left on The Walking Dead.  Tim had just about never touched a pinball machine before and didn’t know the first things to do.  Situations like that really trigger my teacher reflexes and I probably start over-helping sometimes.  I just love giving people the guidance Joseph gave me when I was new, that helped me gradually understand the basic structure of pinball.  Tim joined us when we got to The Simpsons Painful Party and didn’t do much worse than anyone else.

    Tim watches Chris play
    Tim thinks, “What have I gotten myself into?”

    My group’s last game of the night was Junk Yard.  I hadn’t played my first ball yet when suddenly I looked back from a conversation I was having with Joseph and saw that the game appeared to have reset.  I asked what happened and was told Chris slam tilted it.  The league rule for slam tilting is that the culprit takes 0 and everyone else replays the round.  Chris walked off, and the remaining players along with a few bystanders discussed the unfairness of it.

    I didn’t see it happen but I was told that he had certainly earned a tilt but it really should not have been a slam tilt.  Jake suggested we should just pretend it didn’t happen and I said I would be fine with that, but Chris reappeared with quarters he had presumably acquired from Aaron, dropped them into my hand, and said, “Have fun.”   (UPDATE: Chris tells me that they were actually his own quarters, acquired from the change machine.)  He then went upstairs to practice The Walking Dead (which he would be playing at PAPA that weekend).   Presumably Chris will have to stop teasing Mike for slam tilting Junk Yard on a past league night (resulting in a new nickname for Mike, “King Kong”).  Chris later said that although Junk Yard’s slam tilt is too sensitive, he also knows better and had earned his penalty.  Now that is what my father would call “the sportsman’s way.”1

    After league play was over, I dithered about whether I would go to the “after party” (the newly traditional visit to Theio’s) as I still wanted to play.  It was relatively early, so Jake suggested we could go eat and still come back to play more.  He had me at “play more pinball.”  It was only a small group that assembled at Theio’s, perhaps our smallest yet.  Jake, Sam, Mike, Greg, Joseph, and I made for a relatively sedate crowd this time.  Afterward we returned to the Avenue and played a bit more before things broke up for the night.

    Oddly blurred photo of Jake
    Jake is in the pinball vortex!

    That didn’t actually end League Night, though.  Matt P. and Mike S. elected to play makeup games, and so they came back to the Avenue the following Tuesday.  So did Aaron, Greg, Joseph, and I, though our own games were just for fun, as much as I would have liked to substitute my even better game of TotAN (11 million and a replay!).  Joseph and I played with Mike, and Aaron and Greg played with Matt.  Mike had some good games, but apparently Matt did even better.  We were on different floors from him for most of it so I didn’t see what he did, but whatever it was, it earned him the top score for this league meeting.  As Matt is frequently plagued by below-average games during league play, perhaps he’s hit on a new method: play his games when no one is looking.

    Before he headed back home, Mike suggested we should play The Lord of the Rings, since the high score table had apparently been reset.  During our game, I finished ball two somewhere in the 30 millions, and Mike remarked that I must be getting close to the high score table.  Then I started to sweat.  I started Return of the King multiball at the start of ball three, but hit only two jackpots.  Then Destroy the Ring was lit.  I have only gotten to the Destroy the Ring mode once (and didn’t last long in it).  I knew that if I started it, I would be on track to get on the high score table.  I shot at the ring… and I missed.  Game over.  The bonus counted up and I had fallen 1.5 million short of the 40 million needed for the #4 high score, and about half a million short of hitting a personal best.  I was crushed… but it was getting late and glory would have to wait for another night.  We said farewell to Mike (who was leaving) and the others (who were still playing) and headed home, concluding Bonus League Night.

    That’s it for my epic League Night Update, just in time for a new league night in two days.  I would be remiss to conclude, however, without commenting on an unprecedented event in league history.  To the best of my knowledge and recollection, this is the first time in the history of the Lansing Pinball League that Chris has not been at the #1 position in the current rankings.  Thanks in large part to his “slam tap,” Chris has relinquished his place to Alex, at least for now.

    As always, I have some more photos to share, as well as the current results and standings.  See you soon.

    1Like most of the sayings my father used all the time when I was a kid, this one comes from a movie: The Wanderers.