# Never seen before 1 of 1 Prototype Star Wars Episode one White Wood Playfield!

**Source:** Pinball Shenanigans  
**Type:** video  
**Published:** 2025-10-01  
**Duration:** 11m 45s  
**Beat:** Pinball

**URL:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t3bSnm3YF5A

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## Analysis

Mike Dust from Pinball Shenanigans documents acquisition of a rare 1-of-1 whitewood prototype playfield from Star Wars Episode I (1999), the last game Williams produced before shutting down in October 1999. The playfield was preserved by designer John Papaduke, passed through Mike Hanley (Church of the Silver Ball, Toronto), and eventually reached Dust through collector Russell McIntyre. The prototype shows early design iterations including a spinny wheel mechanism (later changed to magnet in production), different insert layouts, drop targets, and cardboard ramps, offering a window into the Pinball 2000 era design process.

### Key Claims

- [HIGH] Star Wars Episode I was the last game Williams produced before shutting down in October 1999 — _Mike Dust states definitively: 'this is basically the last game that Williams produced before they shut down. This game came out in June of 1999. And they Williams were shut down in October of 1999. I think October 10th, I read.'_
- [HIGH] John Papaduke designed Star Wars Episode I and preserved this prototype playfield — _Mike Dust explains: 'John Papaduk, who is the designer, um, lived in Toronto and so did Mike Hanley' and confirms Papaduke 'squirreled this away and kept it' rather than allowing it to be scrapped_
- [HIGH] Mike Hanley possessed this playfield for 20+ years before recently clearing out his collection — _Mike Dust states: 'Mike Hanley has basically possessed it for the last 20 plus years. And then uh he he ran the Church of the Silver Ball in Toronto. He had all kinds of machines and all kinds of parts. And very recently he was clearing out a whole bunch of stuff'_
- [HIGH] The prototype includes a spinny wheel mechanism that was later replaced with a magnet in the production game — _Mike Dust observes: 'this is a spinny wheel rather than what they used in production, which I believe is a magnet' and notes 'that obviously did not make the um production game. I believe it was a magnet.'_
- [MEDIUM] The playfield is fully wired and theoretically functional for installation in a cabinet — _Mike Dust states: 'this is uh actually you know a functioning playfield. You could pop this right into a uh cabinet and hook it up and in theory it should work'_

### Notable Quotes

> "This was destined to be trash. Papa squirreled it away gave it to Hanley and here it is. Pretty freaking cool that this is, you know, still exists. This is really a piece of pinball history right at the end of Williams."
> — **Mike Dust**, ~3:30
> _Captures the historical significance and preservation narrative of the artifact_

> "typically something like this once Williams is done with it, it's destined to be chopped up and thrown into the dumpster"
> — **Mike Hanley (quoted by Mike Dust)**, ~2:50
> _Explains why this prototype surviving is exceptional and noteworthy_

> "there's a neat little Easter egg where if you spell Jar Jar or something, it gives you uh the amount of points that are equal to the date of 1999 1025"
> — **Mike Dust**, ~1:15
> _Shows designer Easter egg indicating self-aware ending of Williams era (October 25, 1999)_

> "This is my first real close look at it... I don't think I've ever had anything quite like this. I've never had a whitewood or a prototype."
> — **Mike Dust**, ~5:00 & ~18:30
> _Establishes rarity and significance of the acquisition for a seasoned collector_

### Entities

| Name | Type | Context |
|------|------|---------|
| Mike Dust | person | Content creator/collector at Pinball Shenanigans; acquired and documented the prototype playfield |
| John Papaduke | person | Legendary pinball designer; designed Star Wars Episode I and preserved this prototype; lived in Toronto |
| Mike Hanley | person | Longtime pinball figure from Toronto; goalkeeper reference in World Cup Soccer; ran Church of the Silver Ball arcade in Toronto; possessed prototype for 20+ years |
| Russell McIntyre | person | Local collector who purchased bulk Williams items from Hanley and eventually sold/traded to Mike Dust |
| Star Wars Episode I | game | 1999 Williams Pinball 2000 game; last game Williams produced before shutdown; prototype playfield documented in this video |
| Williams | company | Historical pinball manufacturer; shut down October 10, 1999 after producing Star Wars Episode I in June 1999 |
| Pinball 2000 | product | Williams platform featuring LCD/CRT screen integration; Star Wars Episode I was final release in series |
| Revenge from Mars | game | Pinball 2000 game released before Star Wars Episode I; mentioned as penultimate Williams release |
| World Cup Soccer | game | John Papaduke-designed game featuring Mike Hanley Easter egg (goalkeeper reference) |
| Circus Voltaire | game | John Papaduke-designed game with Mike Hanley Easter egg references; Mike Dust owns a sample playfield variant |
| Church of the Silver Ball | organization | Arcade/museum in Toronto run by Mike Hanley; housed extensive pinball collection |
| Internet Pinball Database | organization | Database Mike Dust plans to contact for documentation of this prototype playfield |
| Pinball Shenanigans | organization | YouTube channel operated by Mike Dust; documents pinball restoration and acquisition projects |

### Topics

- **Primary:** Prototype and rare pinball artifacts, Williams manufacturing history and final era, Pinball 2000 platform and design iteration
- **Secondary:** John Papaduke legacy and design philosophy, Preservation of pinball history and artifacts, Easter eggs and designer signatures in pinball
- **Mentioned:** Toronto pinball scene and community figures

### Sentiment

**Positive** (0.85) — Mike Dust expresses genuine enthusiasm and reverence for the prototype throughout, emphasizing its historical significance and rarity. Tone is excited but respectful of the artifact's importance. No negativity or criticism present.

### Signals

- **[historical_signal]** Rare prototype playfield unexpectedly survived destruction through designer intervention and fortuitous chain of possession; represents unique window into late-era Williams design process (confidence: high) — John Papaduke 'squirreled this away and kept it' to prevent scrapping; Mike Hanley preserved for 20+ years; now in public hands through collector chain
- **[community_signal]** Prototype playfield acquisition represents the type of rare artifact discovery that circulates through tight-knit collector/operator networks in Toronto pinball scene (confidence: medium) — Chain of possession from Papaduke → Hanley → McIntyre → Dust; all connected to Toronto/regional pinball community through Church of the Silver Ball
- **[design_philosophy]** Prototype shows significant mechanical differences from production game including spinny wheel mechanism, different insert layouts, drop target placement, and cardboard ramp construction (confidence: high) — Visual documentation of alternate spinner mechanic, misaligned inserts, drop target variations, and prototype-phase ramps vs. production specifications
- **[design_philosophy]** John Papaduke's relationship with longtime friend Mike Hanley documented through multiple Easter eggs across games (World Cup Soccer goalkeeper, Circus Voltaire references) (confidence: high) — Mike Hanley 'became the goalkeeper in World Cup soccer' and has 'several several other little Mike Hanley shout out Easter eggs' across Papaduke's games
- **[design_innovation]** Jar Jar Easter egg points value equals October 25, 1999 (1025), suggesting designer self-awareness of imminent Williams shutdown (confidence: medium) — Mike Dust notes: 'if you spell Jar Jar or something, it gives you uh the amount of points that are equal to the date of 1999 1025' in context of Williams closing October 10, 1999

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## Transcript

Hey, I guess this is potentially a timely release of this video because the newest stern Star Wars fall of the Empire just came out and um this is a Star Wars video. So, I've happened across this playfield and it is from a Star Wars episode 1 and I believe it is pretty much never seen before to the general public and I have acquired it. So, I thought I would uh document it because it's pretty freaking cool. So this is uh looks like you know a whitewood prototype playfield and it is uh complete with a wiring harness and everything. So this is uh actually you know a functioning playfield. You could pop this right into a uh cabinet and hook it up and in theory it should work. So the history of this I'm going to cut off this plastic shortly. We're going to take a closer look. But well, this is basically the last game that Williams produced before they shut down. This game came out in June of 1999. And they Williams were shut down in October of 1999. I think October 10th, I read. And there's a neat little Easter egg where if you spell Jar Jar or something, it gives you uh the amount of points that are equal to the date of 1999 1025. So that's kind of a neat little Easter egg. So yeah, last game that Williams produced Pinball 2000 series. The one before that was Revenge from Mars. And then there was like a prototype. There was like something maybe blocks something blocks road. I don't know. I think there's a couple prototype uh pinball 2000 machines and there was also like a Playboy prototype. But this is it. This is the last game. And this Okay. So, the history of this basically is that John Papaduk, who is the designer, um, lived in Toronto and so did Mike Hanley. He is, uh, he's been in the pinball world for many, many moons. Hanley and John Papadiuk both grew up in Toronto. They became buddies and, um, that's how Mike Hanley actually became the goalkeeper in World Cup soccer. And he also has a couple other little Easter egg shoutouts on other Papaduke designed games. Like if you look at the uh back glass of Circus Vater, you can see like Hanley Cable Company or something. And there's several several other little Mike Hanley shout out Easter eggs. I talked to Mike Hanley uh a few days ago just to see if I could pick his brain a little bit about this. And he said that typically something like this once Williams is done with it, it's destined to be chopped up and thrown into the dumpster. But Papaduke kind of like squirreled this away and kept it and, you know, didn't want it to be scrapped. And I think Mike Hanley has basically possessed it for the last 20 plus years. And then uh he he ran the Church of the Silver Ball in Toronto. He had all kinds of machines and all kinds of parts. And very recently he was clearing out a whole bunch of stuff and a local buddy Russell McIntyre he bought a whole bunch of stuff off Hanley including this and then Russell was clearing out a whole bunch of stuff and it ended up in my hands. So this was destined to be trash. Papa squirreled it away gave it to Hanley and here it is. Pretty freaking cool that this is, you know, still exists. This is really a piece of pinball history right at the end of Williams. Anyways, let's stop blathering about, shall we? Let me u grab a knife and we'll actually take a closer look at this thing. My buddy Russell said he bought like a poopload of wrap in an auction and I got a bunch of stuff off of him and he definitely was not shy about using the wrap on the stuff. So, I should probably um be a little more careful here. I don't want to cause any damage. So, I'll be right back. Okay, I managed to get this thing out of its uh plastic wrap cocoon. Let's just take a little peek here and pan around. I probably also should take a bunch of photos for the internet pinball database if they want to uh have this on record, which I don't see why they wouldn't. You can see that this is a cardboard ramp here. But you can see it's fully populated. This is my first real close look at it. There's some miscellaneous wires here. Uh, got some pop bumpers and whatever this mech is. This assembly here is really looks like it's missing something. And then yeah, this is a spinny wheel rather than what they used in production, which I believe is a magnet. We'll get a better look at that once we flip the playfield over. We got this board here, Some of the flipper stuff is missing. Got the whole trough assembly there. I don't know what this is for, but I'm imagining that, you know, one could Well, I bet you these are quick connects for the solenoid lugs. Three on the right, three on the left. So, like I said, I think uh if someone was interested and willing, I think they could get this thing pretty darn near functional. Some sort of paper here to kind of block the light. This is pretty cool. This is pretty cool. Like a John Papadiuk prototype right here in my hands. Yeah. See, here's all the quick connects for the solenoids. Okay. Well, let's uh flip it over and see what that side looks like. All right, here it is in the full frame here. And the most glaringly obvious thing is, hey, it's Whirlwind, but it's not. However, it is a spinny disc. Look at that. So, that obviously did not make the um production game. I believe it was a magnet. And we've got a clear apron here, which is kind of neat. I didn't even notice that at first. And the lightsaber would normally have kind of gone here and maybe down along here or I don't know if this this ramp. So it looks like you just plunge into the playfield like so. If you loop around here to the backside all the way around there's a post ball would come up here and then boink goes nowhere. So, not sure. It's just uh guess they there would have been a hole in there at some point if uh you know, I don't know. It's just part of the whole design process, right? It's not a completely flushed out thing. But the uh the insert layout here, like this is not in the production game. These are kind of, but I think they're more like uh bent up a little bit that way. They're not in the same orientation. I don't know if this is same as production, but all the inserts are uh just not quite the same. And there's a spinner here. In the production game, I believe there's a drop target somewhere maybe around here and here. Oh, look. I actually think I see a drop target. Let's see if I can um pop that up. Yeah, look at that. Here we go. Yellow drop target. It's a little stiff. Oh, got it though. See if there's any art on it. It's like a little bit bent, but there you have it. And then here in production, this is a captive ball. And those look like a couple forks. So, I wonder if I can uh Yeah, here we go. So, they don't latch up or anything, but So, I think Yeah, that's kind of cool. Been a drop target normally. And then you got some inserts here. I should really zoom out. Make life a little better. Some tape here. This thing here. Does this do anything? Oh, yeah. Yeah. Comes up and then you can shoot the ball underneath it. Some more inserts under there. And then it's got this 180 ramp which feeds the balls back down to the flippers. And then we have this uh cardboard ramp. That's pretty cool. You can just kind of see the uh the design process as it is happening here. But yeah, so all the plastics are just kind of blue and you know roughly cut like But that's basically it. Just wanted to, you know, document this and show everybody because I think it's pretty damn cool. I don't think I've ever had anything quite like this. I've never had a whitewood or a prototype. I guess the closest thing I've come to um something cool and rare like this is a sample playfield on my Circus Voltater, which is also a John Papadoo game. So, uh I just noticed the pop bumpers in here. But yeah, looks like this guy should be technically go on there. Yeah, that's basically the tour. Um, pretty much covered everything I can think of. What are these like magnetic ball read switches here? Yeah, looks like it. But yeah, there you have it. Um, John Papauke prototype Whitewood Star Wars Episode 1, Playfield. Last game ever made by

_(Acquisition: youtube_auto_sub, Enrichment: v3)_

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*Exported from Journalist Tool on 2026-04-13 | Item ID: b0f2e98a-2264-4dd9-9afd-c913f3ae8f32*
