


That’s something that Zen wanted to respect. Our most noticeable takeaway after spending an hour playing these new tables is that games can end in a hurry – which makes sense, considering that the whole point was to get people to keep playing (and spending quarters). Purists should know that the new tables aren’t going to be shoehorned into Pinball FX3’s existing format, even though they’ll be residing in a new tab within that game. Players who are familiar with Zen’s other tables have become accustomed to the company’s fun and flashy take on pinball, with animated characters and modes that bend what would be possible with a real machine. We have an exclusive look at the first four pack of tables, which includes Fish Tales, Junk Yard, Medieval Madness, and The Getaway: High Speed II. Today, Zen Studios announced that it has acquired the Williams and Bally licenses, giving it complete global access to their entire libraries – including well-known tables based on The Addam’s Family, The Twilight Zone, and Terminator 2: Judgment Day.

Over the course of a decade, the studio has released its own unique tables and also created new tables based on big names like Star Wars and Marvel. Zen Studios has carved out a lucrative niche in the video game space with its Pinball FX series.
