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07-23-2019 04:36 PM
We have talked before about the growing trend to re-visit (or re-boot) previous titles to make new pinball games, from Pirates of the Caribbean to Star Wars, Star Trek and Guns & Roses.
Stern Pinball’s latest release is a remake of one of their most popular games of the early ’90s – Jurassic Park.
Unlike back in 1993 when the original was released, the new Jurassic Park follows the familiar trend of having three variants – the Pro, Premium and Limited Edition.
Just a note that these pictures don’t come from the official Stern Pinball press release which we haven’t received yet, but are branded as coming from Stern so we believe them to be authentic even though they look to be preliminary compositions.
All three models appear to have three flippers and a shot-rich single-level playfield. All ramp returns are metal, although the left ramp seems to have a plastic riser beneath a molded T-Rex model
The Pro model together with some playfield specifications
The Pro model’s playfield
Playfield shots from the Pro model
The Premium’s playfield (which is usually the same as the Limited Edition’s) doesn’t seem that different from the Pro at first glance, although it does get a different cabinet and backbox art package.
The Premium cabinet and backbox
The Premium model’s playfield
Playfield shots from the Premium modelIt is to be expected that some of the moulded models on the mid and upper-range versions are replaced by flat butyrate plastics on the Pro, with higher-quality trim and a metal bottom arch, but unlike Stern’s last ‘cornerstone’ release – Black Knight: Sword of Rage – there don’t seem to be any major playfield mechanisms taken out too.
It does look as though the dinosaur head on the higher models can move laterally and perhaps follow the ball to some degree.
Here’s a comparison between the Pro (left) and Premium (right) playfields:
The Pro and Premium Jurassic Park playfields
Details of the additional features found on the Limited Edition model haven’t been released yet, but it does had a different art package to the Pro and Premium.
The Limited Edition model’s cabinet and backbox
The LE gets a green lock bar, side rails, legs and hinges with different speakers, but superficially doesn’t appear too radically different from the Premium. We can expect to see a full feature matrix soon detailing the shaker motor, anti-glare glass, and other goodies usually included with the top end model.
Here are the bottom and top end models side-by-side:
The Pro and LE Jurassic Park gamesWe’ll be back with more details of Stern’s newest title very soon here at Pinball News, but in the meantime here is a look at what we assume to be an early version of the instruction card:
The game’s instructions
More...
We have talked before about the growing trend to re-visit (or re-boot) previous titles to make new pinball games, from Pirates of the Caribbean to Star Wars, Star Trek and Guns & Roses.
Stern Pinball’s latest release is a remake of one of their most popular games of the early ’90s – Jurassic Park.
Unlike back in 1993 when the original was released, the new Jurassic Park follows the familiar trend of having three variants – the Pro, Premium and Limited Edition.
Just a note that these pictures don’t come from the official Stern Pinball press release which we haven’t received yet, but are branded as coming from Stern so we believe them to be authentic even though they look to be preliminary compositions.
All three models appear to have three flippers and a shot-rich single-level playfield. All ramp returns are metal, although the left ramp seems to have a plastic riser beneath a molded T-Rex model
The Pro model together with some playfield specifications
The Pro model’s playfield
Playfield shots from the Pro model
The Premium’s playfield (which is usually the same as the Limited Edition’s) doesn’t seem that different from the Pro at first glance, although it does get a different cabinet and backbox art package.
The Premium cabinet and backbox
The Premium model’s playfield
It does look as though the dinosaur head on the higher models can move laterally and perhaps follow the ball to some degree.
Here’s a comparison between the Pro (left) and Premium (right) playfields:
The Pro and Premium Jurassic Park playfields
Details of the additional features found on the Limited Edition model haven’t been released yet, but it does had a different art package to the Pro and Premium.
The Limited Edition model’s cabinet and backbox
The LE gets a green lock bar, side rails, legs and hinges with different speakers, but superficially doesn’t appear too radically different from the Premium. We can expect to see a full feature matrix soon detailing the shaker motor, anti-glare glass, and other goodies usually included with the top end model.
Here are the bottom and top end models side-by-side:
The game’s instructions
More...