![]() ![]() ![]() Gosh, look how pinball pushes me so off my cushion of self-assuredness. One seems not very many tables for over £15 to me, but then everyone seems to be leaving it very positive reviews and not complaining about that. I thought it was going to be more when the Steam page said it was a “three story table”, but it turns out I think they mean “storey”. It is, as far as I can tell, a single table of occult-themed mayhem. And it’s all presented in some absolutely exquisite pixel art. What Demon’s Tilt does that I’m pretty sure not many pinball games do, is add a bunch of shmuppy enemies to ‘attack’ as the ball bounces into them. You can certainly see the similarities, from layout to that lady’s face in the middle of the table. It’s apparently something of a spiritual sequel to a 1990 pinball game called Devil’s Crush. And yet I feel compelled to recommend Demon’s Tilt, because, um, it looks really pretty! And because someone else told me it’s good. What I hope I’ve established by this point is that I am about as far as one can get from being an authority on pinball games. Pinball Dreams maybe? Probably just the demo. I seem to remember playing on Atari pinball game enough to sort of have an idea what I was doing. But over my childhood I certainly played a good few digital tables, almost always because they were included on the cover-disc of a magazine. People who were at the lesson, and know what I should be doing, and most of all, know I wasn’t at the lesson. In the real world there are other people around to watch as I somehow fail to ever time the flippers with the ball, and watch helplessly as it seems to always find a micron-wide path to fall through that tiny gap down the left side and out of play. ![]() I’ve certainly spent more time playing pinball videogames than I have real-world ones. ![]()
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