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Xenon was among twelve titles included in the 2006 digital arcade game UltraPin by UltraCade Technologies. [6] It was chosen in a poll for inclusion in FarSight Studios' 2012 release The Pinball Arcade, and was available for purchase on several platforms until the developer's license to include Williams and Bally tables expired in July 2018.
It was also the second production Bally game with speech (Bally's 1980 Xenon was the first, utilizing a crude 'vocalizer' board set). The game is based on the perennially popular "Flash Gordon" character and stories of comics, film and television. The pinball machine was specifically produced to coincide and promote the 1980 film Flash Gordon.
The Pinball Price Guide; The PinBotz Guide to the Greatest Pinball Machines of the 80s And 90s by Kevin Strasser; Pinball Perspectives: Ace High to World's Series; Pinball Snapshots: Air Aces To Xenon; Pinball Memories: Forty Years of Fun, 1958-1998; Your Pinball Machine: How to Purchase, Adjust, Maintain, and Repair Your Own Machine
This list contains 1809 game titles released for the Amstrad CPC home computer series. ... Advanced Pinball Simulator: 1988: Codemasters: ... Xenon: 1988: Melbourne ...
Pinball video game engines and editors for creation and recreation of pinball machines include for instance Visual Pinball, Future Pinball and Unit3D Pinball. A BBC News article described virtual pinball games e.g. Zen Pinball and The Pinball Arcade as a way to preserve pinball culture and bring it to new audiences. [93]
Xenon is a 1988 vertical scrolling shooter video game, the first developed by The Bitmap Brothers, and published by Melbourne House which was then owned by Mastertronic. It was featured as a play-by-phone game on the Saturday-morning kids' show Get Fresh. [7] Xenon was followed in 1989 by Xenon 2: Megablast.
Pinball: Bell Games February 1983 [749] Pinball Champ: Zaccaria: April 1983 [750] Pinball Champ '82: Zaccaria: April 1982 [751] Pinball Lizard: GamePlan: June 1980 [752] Pinball Magic: Capcom Coin-Op: October 1995 [753] Pinball Pool: Gottlieb: June 1979 [754] Pin-Bot: Williams: October 1986 [755] Pink Panther: Gottlieb: March 1981 [756] Pioneer ...
Tim Wright of Game Boy Extreme considered the game to "play well enough" and feature "good graphics", highlighting the added "tricks, secrets and minigames" and "oodles of detail" on the game's pinball tables. [3] Describing the game as "good fun", Nintendo Official Magazine praised the "imaginative and colourful" tables, but considered them to ...