claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.031
John Wick pinball design and "gun gate" licensing controversy analyzed; conspiracy theories debunked.
John Wick pinball designer Elliot Eisman is a first-time designer, mechanical engineer, with roughly a decade at Stern
high confidence · Dennis states 'First time designer, mechanical engineer, I think has been with Stern for around a decade at this point. Elliot Eisman is the designer'
John Wick pinball pricing: Pro $7,000, Premium $9,700, Limited Edition $13,000 capped at 1,000 units
high confidence · Dennis: 'pricing pros seven thousand dollars premiums ninety seven hundred dollars limited editions thirteen thousand dollars that is capped at one thousand units'
The absence of guns in John Wick artwork was due to Lionsgate requiring an E-for-Everyone rating for public-facing art
high confidence · Dennis from Gomez interview: 'the licensor has to sign off, and because there's no rating system and because they're put out in public, the licensor wouldn't sign off with guns because of whatever reason the licensors have'
Guns do appear in John Wick video clips once gameplay begins, after the start button is pressed
high confidence · Dennis: 'once the start button is pressed they don't care the Lionsgate is like, whatever. We know what John Wick is. It's time for the gun, Kata.'
Stern offers optional weapons crate with guns in the goodie bag for homeowners/locations to install if desired
high confidence · Dennis: 'there's a crate with guns because homeowners might want to – or locations that are like I'm okay with it being this way or I'm a bar and I don't let kids in'
George Gomez has indicated Stern would walk away from licenses if the artistic restrictions were too severe
high confidence · Dennis: 'Gomez even says there are games where they've walked away from because they felt like they couldn't do it justice because of what was laid down to them as the rules'
Code for John Wick is by Tim Sexton (lead) and Joshua Henderson
high confidence · Dennis: 'Code is Tim Sexton, I believe on Lead, and then Joshua Henderson did significant help with that package'
“I don't like the style they went with... this definitely would not be one i would get because of the art like i wouldn't hang any of this on my wall”
Tony @ approx. 24:00 — Expresses strong aesthetic criticism of John Wick playfield art direction, indicating design choice may negatively impact collector interest
“I totally understand that if you are a huge John Wick fan and it broke your little heart to not see guns all over the playfield, to jump to all of this just like insane conspiracy rabbit hole nonsense... is just sad”
Dennis @ approx. 40:00 — Directly criticizes community reaction to missing guns as irrational and unfounded
“I have lost respect for several people in this hobby... just because of how this happened”
Dennis @ approx. 55:00 — Shows genuine community disappointment over how members reacted to the controversy without factual basis
“If I had had a reaction like this, I would have been so embarrassed. I would have deleted it after the truth came out”
Tony @ approx. 48:00 — Reflects on the severity of community overreaction and lack of accountability for unsubstantiated claims
“it looks competent would be the way i would put it”
Tony @ approx. 31:00 — Summarizes overall assessment of John Wick design as functional but not particularly exciting or differentiated
business_signal: Stern indicated willingness to walk away from licenses if artistic constraints prevent doing the IP justice; suggests careful evaluation of licensor demands
medium · Dennis: 'Gomez even says there are games where they've walked away from because they felt like they couldn't do it justice because of what was laid down to them as the rules'
community_signal: John Wick artwork missing firearms sparked conspiracy theories about 'woke' design, Disney interference, and Second Amendment opposition, despite straightforward licensing explanation
high · Dennis: 'I have seen from that this is Stern Pinball going woke and deciding that they hate guns' and 'Either Disney is a corporate overlord and Stern is the puppet... Or... Stern does so many licenses with Disney that Disney now has some sort of carte blanche authority to veto art packages'
sentiment_shift: Hosts express loss of respect for community members who spread conspiracy theories; criticize emotional, rage-filled reactions without factual basis
high · Dennis: 'I have lost respect for several people in this hobby... just because of how this happened' and Tony: 'I can't even imagine having posted some of this stuff'
design_philosophy: John Wick artwork received mixed-to-negative reception from hosts; playfield art described as 'Photoshop cutout' style with photorealistic character heads, causing jarring tonal inconsistency
high · Tony: 'I don't actually like any of the art at all... it feels very much like a hand-drawn version of the old Photoshop cutout art' and 'Here's a ramp with someone's face on it. Here's a ramp with someone's face on it'
groq_whisper · $0.258
Art for John Wick is by Randy Martinez
high confidence · Dennis: 'Art is done by the famed Randy Martinez'
licensing_signal: Lionsgate required E-for-Everyone rating on public-facing artwork due to lack of pinball rating system, allowing guns only in video clips (after start button pressed) and optional crate for adult venues
high · Dennis from Gomez interview: 'the licensor has to sign off, and because there's no rating system and because they're put out in public, the licensor wouldn't sign off with guns' and 'once the start button is pressed they don't care'
market_signal: Playfield layout described as 'fan layout' with shots far back; no particularly differentiated mechanical features compared to recent Stern releases like Venom
medium · Tony: 'when i look at it i don't it doesn't look particularly special' and comparison to Venom's swinging doppelganger mechanic
personnel_signal: Elliot Eisman's first pinball design as mechanical engineer at Stern; hosts note potential unfair criticism due to non-design-related issues (licensing, art direction, marketing)
medium · Dennis: 'i feel bad for elliot because it's his first time putting out a design and there's so many issues that have about this that have probably nothing to do with the actual'
market_signal: John Wick Limited Edition capped at 1,000 units at $13,000 MSRP; hosts note calling 1,000 units 'limited' may be questionable given terminology debate
medium · Dennis: 'limited editions thirteen thousand dollars that is capped at one thousand units calling something with a thousand units limited i know'
product_strategy: John Wick three-tier model includes Muscle Car Bash toy (swinging on Premium/LE vs static on Pro), motorized Blood Oath token (Premium/LE vs plastic on Pro), weapons crate with opening mechanism (Premium/LE vs stand-up targets on Pro), and center ramp ball lock (Premium/LE only)
high · Dennis detailed feature matrix comparing Pro vs Premium vs LE; motorized toy and physical locks exclusive to higher tiers