# Playing the Field

**Source:** Pinball News Website  
**Type:** article  
**Published:** 2005-10-06  
**Beat:** Pinball

**URL:** https://www.pinballnews.com/news/playfields.html

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## Analysis

A 2005 Pinball News article documenting the split between Greg Walker and Mike Purcell following their joint Fathom playfield reproduction project under Halifax Pinball. The two formed rival companies—Fantastic Pinball and Classic Playfield Reproductions (CPR)—both pursuing classic playfield reproduction, notably both targeting Centaur. The article notes competitive dynamics in the emerging playfield reproduction market alongside other manufacturers like Illinois Pin Ball and The Pinball Factory.

### Key Claims

- [HIGH] Greg Walker and Mike Purcell parted ways after completing Fathom playfield reproductions under Halifax Pinball — _Direct statement in article; Greg Walker had previously reported on the project for Pinball News_
- [HIGH] Halifax Pinball was a name already in use by another company, so it was not continued after shipment — _Explicit statement in article_
- [HIGH] CPR secured a deal with Illinois Pin Ball (IPB) to produce Centaur playfields with in-house routing and silk screening equipment — _Announced deal described in article dated October 6, 2005_
- [HIGH] Both Fantastic Pinball and CPR independently targeted Centaur as their first reproduction playfield project — _Article explicitly states both companies intended to reproduce Centaur_
- [HIGH] Both IPB and The Pinball Factory announced intentions to produce Funhouse playfields, creating a parallel competitive situation — _Noted as similar competitive dynamic to the two Centaur projects_

### Notable Quotes

> "The playfields were produced under the name Halifax Pinball but in truth that name was already in use by another company. So once the playfields had been sent out to the customers, the name was no longer used."
> — **Pinball News article**, n/a
> _Explains the dissolution of the original Halifax Pinball entity and legal/business constraints_

> "They say this will ensure quality control and enable them to produce much smaller runs than would otherwise be commercially viable."
> — **CPR (Mike Purcell and Kevin Wayte, via article)**, n/a
> _States CPR's competitive positioning strategy regarding in-house equipment investment_

> "Friendly rivalry can produce positive results - driving both sides to improve and out-perform the other, but it can also boil over into a heated disagreement and this unfortunately happened in a very public way on the rec.games.pinball newsgroup."
> — **Pinball News article**, n/a
> _Documents community conflict between the rival companies in early online pinball forums_

### Entities

| Name | Type | Context |
|------|------|---------|
| Greg Walker | person | Co-founder of Halifax Pinball Fathom project; founder of Fantastic Pinball; Pinball News contributor |
| Mike Purcell | person | Co-founder of Halifax Pinball Fathom project; co-founder of Classic Playfield Reproductions (CPR) |
| Kevin Wayte | person | Co-founder of Classic Playfield Reproductions (CPR) with Mike Purcell |
| Halifax Pinball | company | Original entity for Fathom playfield reproduction project; name was already in use by another company; dissolved after shipment |
| Fantastic Pinball | company | Company formed by Greg Walker after Halifax Pinball split; based in Halifax, Nova Scotia; intended to produce Centaur playfields |
| Classic Playfield Reproductions | company | CPR; company formed by Mike Purcell and Kevin Wayte after Halifax Pinball split; based in Halifax, Nova Scotia; acquired in-house routing and silk screening equipment; partnered with Illinois Pin Ball for Centaur reproduction |
| Illinois Pin Ball | company | IPB; owned original Centaur artwork films; partnered with CPR for Centaur playfield reproduction; competitor to The Pinball Factory on Funhouse playfields |
| The Pinball Factory | company | Competitor to IPB on Funhouse playfield reproduction; part of emerging competitive playfield reproduction market |
| Fathom | game | Classic pinball game whose playfield was reproduced by Halifax Pinball; project that triggered the split leading to Fantastic Pinball and CPR |
| Centaur | game | Classic pinball game targeted by both Fantastic Pinball and CPR for playfield reproduction; also the subject of the parallel competitive situation |
| Funhouse | game | Classic pinball game targeted for reproduction by both IPB and The Pinball Factory |
| Pinball News | organization | Independent online pinball media outlet; published original Fathom project story; source of this article |

### Topics

- **Primary:** Playfield reproduction and restoration market, Business competition and rivalry in homebrew/aftermarket pinball sector
- **Secondary:** Classic game licensing and IP ownership (Illinois Pin Ball owning Centaur artwork), Community conflict on early online pinball forums (rec.games.pinball), Manufacturing capabilities and equipment investment for quality control

### Sentiment

**Neutral** (0) — Article maintains journalistic balance, documenting both positive competition ('drive both sides to improve') and negative conflict ('boiled over into heated disagreement') without editorial opinion. Tone is informative and matter-of-fact regarding business developments.

### Signals

- **[business_signal]** Formation of two competing playfield reproduction companies (Fantastic Pinball and CPR) from split of original Halifax Pinball venture, signaling emerging market opportunity and consolidation of manufacturing capabilities (confidence: high) — Greg Walker formed Fantastic Pinball; Mike Purcell and Kevin Wayte formed CPR; both based in Halifax, Nova Scotia; both targeting classic playfield reproduction
- **[community_signal]** Public disagreement between Fantastic Pinball and CPR representatives escalated on rec.games.pinball newsgroup following business split (confidence: high) — 'Friendly rivalry can produce positive results...but it can also boil over into a heated disagreement and this unfortunately happened in a very public way on the rec.games.pinball newsgroup'
- **[competitive_signal]** CPR leveraging in-house equipment investment (routing and silk screening) to enable smaller production runs as competitive advantage against other manufacturers (confidence: high) — CPR acquiring 'their own in-house equipment for routing the playfields and silk screening the artwork from the original films owned by IPB. They say this will ensure quality control and enable them to produce much smaller runs than would otherwise be commercially viable'
- **[market_signal]** Multiple manufacturers (Fantastic Pinball, CPR, Illinois Pin Ball, The Pinball Factory) simultaneously pursuing same classic playfield reproductions (Centaur, Funhouse), indicating strong collector demand and emerging competition in restoration/reproduction market (confidence: high) — Both Fantastic Pinball and CPR targeting Centaur; both IPB and The Pinball Factory announcing Funhouse playfield intentions

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## Transcript

Story  dated
October 6, 2005
.

The project to reproduce Fathom playfields was one of the great independent productions of recent years.  When Greg Walker told the story here in Pinball News the playfields had been produced and shipped to the buyers.

But the story didn't end there because the enterprise took its toll on those involved and led to a split between the two key people behind the project.

The playfields were produced under the name Halifax Pinball but in truth that name was already in use by another company.  So once the playfields had been sent out to the customers, the name was no longer used.  But by that stage, Greg and

Mike Purcell

had parted company.

Greg formed Fantastic Pinball to move forward his stated intention to produce more playfields starting with Centaur.  Mike teamed up with Kevin Wayte to form Classic Playfield Reproductions.  Both companies were based in Halifax, Nova Scotia in Canada and both were intending to reproduce classic playfields.  Some rivalry seemd assured.

And sure enough, this week Mike and Kevin announced their plans for Classic Playfield Reproductions (CPR) starting with a deal with Illinois Pin Ball (IPB) to produce new playfields for.... Centaur. The deal involves CPR acquiring their own in-house equipment for routing the playfields and Marc Silk screening the artwork from the original films owned by IPB. They say this will ensure quality control and enable them to produce much smaller runs than would otherwise be commercially viable.  Their products will be available through IPB.

The bizarre situation of two companies both working on playfields for the same game mirrors the situation where both IPB and The Pinball Factory have announced their intention to make Funhouse playfields.

Friendly rivalry can produce positive results - driving both sides to improve and out-perform the other, but it can also boil over into a heated disagreement and this unfortunately happened in a very public way on the rec.games.pinball newsgroup.

But that aside, the stage is now set with Fantastic Pinball and Classic Playfield Reproductions  joining Illinois Pin Ball and The Pinball Factory as potential sources of reproduction playfields meaning collectors can look forward to new ways to restore their games like never before.

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to the news index

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to the front page

_(Acquisition: raw_text, Enrichment: v1)_

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*Exported from Journalist Tool on 2026-04-13 | Item ID: bc69c460-3c75-41c8-911d-83608b54f9d3*
