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Song of the Week
We featured Lip Critic last year for "Mirror Match" — the one with the pinball-inspired music video and interactive site. I flagged them as a band to watch, and I'm doubling down this week. Their new album Theft World drops May 1 on Partisan Records, and based on the few tracks I've heard, this could be their breakout year.
The backstory on this record is kinda nuts too — frontman Bret Kaser got his identity stolen by a fan while touring Hex Dealer, and somehow that ended up reshaping the entire album. I'll let you read the Stereogum piece for the full story because it's genuinely unhinged and quite the story of turning lemons into lemonade.
"Legs in a Snare" rips. Catchy, high-energy, with a demonic music video that one YouTuber described as "the Babadook if it slayed." Hard to argue with that.
Pinball News of the Week
Is a Pinball Talent War Heating Up?
Rob Rath and Nick Neitzel are joining American Pinball.
We published the full story earlier this week. The short version: Rath, co-founder of The Electric Playground, takes on a Product Director role while Neitzel — whose homebrew Tony Hawk's Pro Pinball won the 2024 TWIPY Homebrew Game of the Year — steps in as Product Designer. They'll work alongside Creative Director Melvin Williams on what AP describes as "a slate of remakes and original titles." Unusually, Rath also stays on as GM of TEP simultaneously, with TEP expanding to 4,000 square feet and doubling production lines to handle the increased workload.
But the AP news might be indicative of a bigger trend in the industry. Granted, AP is in startup mode, but there's a quiet war for talent happening at the fringes. Barrels of Fun recently brought on Kyle Smet, the creator of the Big Trouble in Little China homebrew. Multimorphic hired Kevin Manne from Buffalo Pinball. Homebrew has always been a solid pipeline into the industry, but the rate of hiring activity seems to be increasing — and we're seeing more people get pulled in from other areas, too, like mods, accessories, and content creators.
I'm way more networked than I used to be, but it sure does feel like a lot of people in my orbit are getting industry jobs lately. For anyone pushing the "pinball is dying" narrative (counter-narratives, right?), this looks a lot more like an industry that's ramping up. Who's next?
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What to Expect at Texas Pinball Festival
TPF runs March 20-22 in Frisco, and normally, this is where we see a wave of new reveals and announcements for the first part of the year. This year? Could be quiet.
Here's what I'm watching. HEXA is launching Three Musketeers — we got an invite to their release event in France, and I wish I could have made that work, but they will be stateside at TPF with their new game too. American Pinball has real energy heading into the fest, and if they're ready to announce their first title under new ownership (the rumor mill points to a Cirqus Voltaire remake), this is the stage for it. Could we see something from Turner? Maybe the rumored Whitewater sequel from Dennis Nordman? Jack Guarnieri loves a surprise reveal — he pulled it off with Harry Potter — and the Steve Ritchie / Sonic the Hedgehog rumors haven't died down. If Guarnieri has something up his sleeve, this is where we could hear about it.
On the other hand, World Pinball isn't on the exhibitor floor map, so I wouldn't expect their rumored Resident Evil game to be there. I don't think we'll get anything new from Barrels of Fun. I'd heard whispers of CGC trying to be ready with a Halo reveal at TPF, but I wouldn't put much weight on it. Pedretti is due for an announcement, but they're not on the exhibitor list either.
What might happen instead is a quieter TPF where people get quality time with the hyped new releases — Beetlejuice, Pokémon — rather than chasing a dozen new announcements.
Pokémon's Bulbasaur Lane Problem
Operators receiving Pokémon Pro models have been reporting a left feed issue — a misinstalled orbit ball guide on the Bulbasaur lane that protrudes into the lane itself. George Gomez has publicly stated that the issue has been addressed internally at Stern, but obviously, that fix hasn’t had time to get out into the market yet. If it's something that requires a more serious fix, look to recent history with Star Wars: Fall of the Empire and the Death Star shot fix for how things could play out.
New Pokémon Tutorial Is Live
Not all Pokémon news is ball guides and production snafus. Noah Crable published a full tutorial over on Kineticist — skill shots, story modes, catching mechanics, Team Rocket multiball, the works. If you’re heading out to your local spot to play the game this weekend and want to know what to shoot for, start there.
TWIPY Behind the Scenes (and Nudge 6 Is Here)
I joined the BASH crew and Ian from Nudge on the BASH Pinball podcast this week to talk TWIPY behind the scenes and share some Pokémon impressions. Fun hang as always.
Speaking of Ian — Nudge 6 dropped this week. The limited edition ($40) comes signed and numbered with a screen-printed Bad Cats poster by Tanner Petch, a joke book from Ian, and a sticker pack. Pinball horoscopes, a travel piece on Dutch pinball, an Akira game feature, and the usual Nudge weirdness. I’ve already got my copy on order.
IFPA Adds Two New Team Members
The IFPA announced two new staff additions this week. Christina Capra, the North Carolina state representative for women's competitive pinball, comes from the Cape Fear Flipper club and Charlotte's Abari league. Emily Cosson is an Australian competitive player who hosts the Australian Pinball Open alongside her dad, John Cosson (and Kineticist contributor!), and started a Belles & Chimes league in Brisbane. More people doing the work of growing the competitive scene — fits the theme of the week.
A Note for Paid Subscribers
I'm hoping to have a new Moving Units update for you next week. I've been doing a ton of tech work behind the scenes — improving our data collection and tracking for the series — and I'm still getting on top of it. I'm also in the middle of migrating and rebuilding all of Kineticist onto a new platform and tech stack, which is eating a lot of my time, but I'm really excited about what it should enable. There are things I've always wanted to do with this site that technical limitations have held back. More soon (I hope — tech work rarely goes as planned).
We're Looking for More Writers
So in the years I’ve been running Kineticist, I’ve never actually put out a formal call for contributors like this. Usually, they come in through friends or general word of mouth. That said, we're looking to expand our writer pool at Kineticist. We love our current team of contributors, but there's always an opportunity to do more, and it’s always good to know who is out there and interested in these things.
What we're looking for: pinball and arcade culture coverage with a business lens. Location pinball, homebrew, the mod scene, interviews. We're also open to new beats in adjacent spaces — toys, gaming, music, movies, pop culture. If you've got a creative pitch, we want to hear it.
This is paid work — we start at a flat rate of $50 per post, and we're open to discussing custom arrangements as needed. We prefer writers who can commit to a regular schedule over one-offs, though we'll consider those too.
If any of this sounds like you, email [email protected] (prior writing samples appreciated).
Links of the Week
The Vergecast: Hasbro CEO Chris Cocks — Really enjoyed this one. Nilay Patel interviews Chris Cocks on AI in toy design, licensed IP strategy, tariffs, and the trend of adults buying toys. Some pinball overlap — Stern's D&D license ladders up to Hasbro, and there's interesting thinking on location-based entertainment and market dynamics in a very similar space as pinball. The Verge
5 Minutes to Tilt: Greg Freres and Mark Ritchie — Great series from the Dutch Pinball Museum. Two recent episodes feature legends Freres and Ritchie. Short, well-produced, and worth your time. Greg Freres | Mark Ritchie
Wedgehead Podcast: Whitewater Is the Best Game Ever — The Wedgehead crew makes the case for Dennis Nordman's 1993 Williams classic as the GOAT. Timely, given Whitewater sequel rumors heading into TPF. Wedgehead ep113
Pinball Profile: Cassie Begay — The 2026 INDISC Women's champ from Colorado talks about the victory and seeing the world through pinball. Pinball Profile ep435
Pinball Studio: Imoto Harney of Marco Specialties — Imoto talks TPF involvement and her path into the hobby. Pinball Studio ep18
Abe Flips on the Dirtypool Podcast — Talks about his new instructional series, Mastering Pinball, and pinball education more broadly. Dirtypool
Poll of the Week
Last Week’s Poll Results
“Eh, what?”
“Never heard of it but it seems like all my friends listen to the audio version or have read the books.”
“I am a manchild, like many other pinball players. But DCC was the most juvenile book I've ever attempted. Like it was written by an angry 14 year old incel who uses vulgarity as a crutch, instead of trying to craft artful sentences. Still, I love D&D, and the concept of dungeon crawling in a pin is appealing.”
“Don't know that ip. I'll definitely check it out though.”
“What the hell. It is different, I would be more interested if it was a Spooky or BOF game. Doesn't seem to fit with JJP or Stern”
“I’m sorry, who? (I’m being tongue in cheek; I know you just explained it in this newsletter)”
“I’m exhausted by nostalgia and open to new, fun ideas. I love the potential here”
“Yes, I'm already on the interest list with my dealer (I hope, he hasn't replied). My 30 year old son (he read all the books) called me up freaking out about the article Colin posted here with this rumor. I never heard of Dungeon Crawler Carl, but now I'm intrigued. I'll read the first book and see. If the one of many rumors are true about BoF and Karl doing it, I'm all in. The Winchester theme was my perfect theme and Karl did a great job on it. If he can kick out another great game with this theme, it's mine. If the BoF rumor is not true, I'm out.”
“Really excited for a rather unknown title like this to make its way to pinball. Very reminiscent of 90s Williams/Bally, now if the gameplay matches the hype, look out, it could be the sleeper hit of 2026/27'!”
“Amazing IP, perfect fit for pinball.”
“Put myself on an interested list as soon as it was announced. This is the kinda theme I crave in pinball—silly and niche and fun.”
“People saying no don’t read lol”
“Has there ever been a pin straight from a book (that didn't have a movie or TV show)? That's what excites me about this. Lots of freedom to create something awesome. And as a fan of the book series, I'm thrilled to think it is first coming to life through a pinball machine!”
“100% please god give it”
“I just read through the series last year and became a fan. One of the best series I've read on a long time”
“What the heck?? Never heard of him.”
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