# Is a Stern Pinball "Elf" Machine in the Works?

**Source:** Knapp Arcade  
**Type:** article  
**Published:** 2022-08-07  
**Beat:** Pinball

**URL:** https://www.knapparcade.org/is-a-stern-pinball-elf-machine-in-the-works

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## Analysis

A homebrew Elf pinball machine created by Bob Nies was displayed at Texas Pinball Festival and gained attention from Stern Pinball representatives, who requested photos. Subsequently, Stern allegedly pressured a distributor to remove the homebrew from a tournament and delete social media posts. The article speculates whether Stern is protecting licensing relationships with New Line Cinema or has already acquired the Elf license for a commercial release.

### Key Claims

- [HIGH] Stern Pinball representatives asked permission to take several pictures of Bob Nies' homebrew Elf machine at Texas Pinball Festival in March — _Bob Nies interview; author witnessed positive reception from Stern representatives_
- [MEDIUM] A Stern Pinball representative called a distributor and instructed them to remove the homebrew Elf machine from a tournament and delete social media posts about it — _Author reports observing the removal and noting disappeared social media posts, but did not directly witness or confirm the Stern call_
- [MEDIUM] New Line Cinema holds the rights to Elf — _Author's stated belief; not independently verified in article_
- [HIGH] Stern is 'very protective of its licensing relationships because licensed themes are the company's bread and butter' — _Author's observation of known industry practice_
- [HIGH] Bob Nies and his family chose Elf over Tommy Boy as the homebrew theme because Elf is their all-time favorite movie — _Direct quote from Bob Nies interview_

### Notable Quotes

> "Bob and his family have never sought any notoriety for the game that they produced. He has mostly been sharing his progress on the project with other homebrewers."
> — **Author (Knapp Arcade)**, N/A
> _Establishes Bob Nies as a casual hobbyist without commercial intent, contextualizing the Stern response as potentially disproportionate_

> "Stern is understandably very protective of its licensing relationships because licensed themes are the company's bread and butter."
> — **Author (Knapp Arcade)**, N/A
> _Frames Stern's protective stance as rational business practice, though author notes it could have been handled more tactfully_

> "Elf doesn't really seem to be the type of theme that Stern would produce a pin for to me, but Stranger Things have happened"
> — **Author (Knapp Arcade)**, N/A
> _Author expresses skepticism about Stern acquiring Elf license while acknowledging possibility; uses pinball pun_

### Entities

| Name | Type | Context |
|------|------|---------|
| Bob Nies | person | Creator of homebrew Elf pinball machine; hobbyist game designer who built game with family |
| Stern Pinball | company | Major pinball manufacturer allegedly suppressing homebrew Elf machine; representatives viewed game at Texas Pinball Festival |
| Elf (homebrew machine) | game | Family-created homebrew pinball based on Will Ferrell Christmas movie; displayed at Texas Pinball Festival; allegedly suppressed by Stern |
| New Line Cinema | company | Believed rights-holder of Elf movie; Stern may be protecting relationship with this licensor |
| Texas Pinball Festival | event | March event where homebrew Elf machine was displayed and well-received; Stern representatives requested photos |
| Scott Danesi | person | Pinball designer who viewed Elf homebrew at Texas Pinball Festival |
| American Pinball | company | Manufacturer with representative who viewed Elf homebrew at Texas Pinball Festival |
| Will Ferrell | person | Star of Elf movie, the IP basis for Bob Nies' homebrew machine |
| IFPA | organization | International Flipper Pinball Association; potentially sanctioning the tournament where Elf machine was removed |
| Knapp Arcade | person/content_creator | Author of article; previously posted about Elf homebrew in March; interviewed Bob Nies |

### Topics

- **Primary:** Homebrew pinball machines and community, IP licensing and manufacturer protection of intellectual property rights, Stern Pinball's licensing strategy and relationship management
- **Secondary:** Potential future commercial Stern Pinball releases, Tournament regulations and social media management around homebrew games

### Sentiment

**Mixed** (0.35) — Author is sympathetic to Bob Nies' hobby project and critical of Stern's handling (noting lack of tact), but also acknowledges Stern's legitimate business concerns. Tone is investigative and speculative rather than accusatory. Author defends Stern's licensing protectiveness while questioning execution.

### Signals

- **[business_signal]** Stern's strict licensing relationship management and willingness to exert corporate pressure on distributors and community members to protect IP interests (confidence: high) — Alleged call to distributor demanding removal of machine and social media posts; systematic deletion of references across platforms
- **[community_signal]** Stern Pinball allegedly suppressed a homebrew Elf machine by pressuring a distributor to remove it from tournament play and delete social media posts, sparking speculation about licensing intent (confidence: medium) — Author reports Elf machine was mysteriously pulled from tournament after Stern representative called distributor; multiple social media posts about the game disappeared; author did not directly witness the Stern call but reports observing consequences
- **[community_signal]** Homebrew machine gained significant public enthusiasm and manufacturer interest at Texas Pinball Festival, demonstrating community appetite for unlicensed fan creations (confidence: high) — Bob Nies reports positive reception; Stern representatives requested photos; manufacturer representatives lined up to play; distributor tournament organizers embraced the game
- **[licensing_signal]** Stern's aggressive removal of Elf homebrew from public tournament suggests either protective posture toward New Line Cinema relationship or undisclosed acquisition of Elf license (confidence: medium) — Stern representative's call to distributor; systematic removal of social media references; Stern's known protectiveness of licensing relationships
- **[rumor_hype]** Speculation that Stern Pinball may have acquired or is acquiring license to produce commercial Elf pinball machine (confidence: low) — Author speculates this as possible explanation for suppression but acknowledges Elf 'doesn't really seem to be the type of theme that Stern would produce'; lists Elf among potential future releases

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## Transcript

Back in March, I wrote a post here about an awesome-looking homebrew pinball machine based on the classic Will Ferrell Christmas movie, Elf. Check the pictures of this game out.

It's awesome.

Earlier today I had the pleasure of speaking with the creator of the Elf machine, Bob Nies. He told me the whole story of the Elf homebrew pin, how he wanted to create a his own custom pinball machine with his family as a fun hobby and that they ultimately chose the movie Elf over Tommy Boy as a theme because Elf is their all-time favorite movie.

Bob and his family have never sought any notoriety for the game that they produced. He has mostly been sharing his progress on the project with other homebrewers, but he did bring the machine to the Texas Pinball Festival back in March. The game was super well-received at the show. The public loved it and representatives from a number of pinball manufacturers even lined up to play it, from American pinball, to the super cool pinball designer Scott Danesi to a number of people from Stern Pinball. Interestingly, the people from Stern liked the Elf pin so much that they asked his permission to take several pictures of the game.

Flash forward to this week, I noticed a post on Facebook stating that the Elf homebrew game was going to make an appearance at a pinball distributor to play and even be included in a tournament that they were holding. How cool is that? So Bob brought the machine to the event, people were loving it and it was holding up well during tournament play...UNTIL the game all of a sudden was mysteriously pulled from the tourney. It's a homebrew, so obviously a mech went down or a bug caused the software to crash, causing it to be taken out, right? Not exactly. What really happened is a representative from Stern pinball called the distributor and told them to not only remove the game from the tournament but also remove any social media posts that they have made about the Elf homebrew pinball machine. In fact, many posts across social media referencing the Elf game seem to have mysteriously disappeared over the past several months.

Hmmmmmm, so why would Stern Pinball want eliminate all references to a hobbyist's family project? I can think of two possible reasons, one is that the tournament was an officially sanctioned IFPA or Stern circuit event and Stern wants to protect any current or future relationship that it has with New Line Cinema, who I believe is the rights-holder for Elf. Stern is understandably very protective of its licensing relationships because licensed themes are the company's bread and butter. I definitely wouldn't blame Stern at all if that was indeed the reason that they shut things down. New Line Cinema owns the rights to a TON of movie franchises, I believe including both the original Lord of the Rings movies and the upcoming Amazon series for example.

The other possible explanation is that Stern Pinball already has the license to produce a pinball machine based on the movie Elf. If Stern has the Elf license they obviously wouldn't want anyone else showing off their own version of Elf pinball.

So which is it? I honestly have no idea. If it was the former, Stern probably could have handled things a little more tactfully and just reached out to Bob saying something like "Hey man. We love your homebrew game and enthusiasm, but we really can't put it in a Stern tournament or feature it on social media because we need to be very careful with licensing." He absolutely would have understood.

As for the latter, Elf doesn't really seem to be the type of theme that Stern would produce a pin for to me, but Stranger Things have happened (ahhhh, see the pinball reference lol). I suppose that we can add Elf to the list of potential future Stern Pinball machines that already includes things like He-Man, Jaws, Back to the Future and Venom to name a few :) .

Time to try out that new Poll feature again.

_(Acquisition: raw_text, Enrichment: v1)_

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*Exported from Journalist Tool on 2026-04-13 | Item ID: cc84bba5-4db4-425c-b996-4e0b21f91e88*
