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Is IPDB Dying? Visualizing the Slow Death of a Pinball Institution

Kineticist·article·analyzed·Jan 13, 2026
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Analysis

claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 (batch) · $0.012

TL;DR

IPDB, pinball's foundational database, faces decline with 93% fewer updates and vanishing search visibility.

Summary

A Kineticist analysis arguing that IPDB (Internet Pinball Database), a foundational pinball community resource since 2002, is in terminal decline due to sharply reduced update activity, failure to catalog modern releases, and a 90% drop in search engine visibility since 2017. The piece cites data showing only 612 database changes in 2024 (93% decline from 2020) and notes that none of 2024-2025's releases have been added, while acknowledging the author's conflict of interest as Kineticist operates a competing database.

Key Claims

  • IPDB made only 612 changes to its database in 2024, representing a 93% drop from 2020 and 96% decline from its 2004 peak

    high confidence · Kineticist article, citing IPDB change logs

  • Since 2020, approximately 56 new major commercially available pinball games have been released, but IPDB has added only 16 to its database, with the last entry being Stern's Venom in 2023

    high confidence · Kineticist article analysis of IPDB records

  • IPDB monthly traffic dropped from 100,000+ visitors in late 2013 to below 20,000 in November 2025, per SEMRush data

    high confidence · Kineticist article, citing SEMRush analytics

  • IPDB search engine visibility declined by approximately 90%, from 69,000 keywords in February 2017 to around 7,000 keywords today

    high confidence · Kineticist article, citing SEMRush data

  • IPDB traces its roots to 1997 when Swedish pinball fan David Byers created Pinball Pasture, which evolved into the Internet Pinball Database

    high confidence · Kineticist article, historical documentation

  • Chris Wolf and a group of new hobbyists purchased the ipdb.org domain in December 2001 and relaunched it on March 22, 2002

    high confidence · Kineticist article, citing Wolf's usenet announcement from 2002

  • Jay Stafford has served as Senior Editor of IPDB since shortly after its 2002 launch and continues in that role today

    high confidence · Kineticist article, citing Stafford's 2011 Skill-Shot interview and current status

Notable Quotes

  • “I'd like to announce a new replacement Pinball Database available on the Internet at http://www.ipdb.org... The work done by Frank, David and the others for the existing IPD site has been of immeasurable value to us all and is probably used by everyone reading this, but as their businesses have taken off, they've been unable to continue their excellent work.”

    Chris Wolf @ March 22, 2002 (historical, quoted in article) — Official announcement of IPDB's relaunch, establishing continuity with earlier pinball database work

  • “...I do everything else, which is provide content, interact with people, go to the shows, do what I call outreach which is just try to find pinball machines and pictures and data that we don't have and bring it into the site, collaborate with other historians and try to build history, and research history, so we can have things to say about the games rather than just some antiseptic listing of name, rank and serial number.”

    Jay Stafford @ 2011 (Skill-Shot magazine interview, quoted in article) — Describes IPDB's editorial mission and Stafford's hands-on role in community outreach and historical research

  • “It's so strange you can't even hardly put a game name and 'IPDB' in a Google search now and get it to show. It used to be within the first 3-4 search items by just throwing any game name in.”

    Anonymous Pinside user @ Recent (quoted in article) — Community observation of IPDB's declining search visibility and discoverability

  • “A legacy website that's not consistently maintained, largely static in design and content, featuring increasingly outdated information, and experiencing more frequent technical issues.”

    Colin (Kineticist author) @ Current article — Synthesis of IPDB's current condition and trajectory

  • “Every signal I see suggests an entity that may not be with us into the next decade, if not sooner.”

    Colin (Kineticist author) @ Current article — Author's forecast of IPDB's long-term viability based on trend analysis

  • “I should be transparent here: Kineticist operates our own pinball games database, and we've seen increased engagement as IPDB has declined. That obviously colors my perspective, which I feel should be clear.”

Entities

IPDB (Internet Pinball Database)productDavid ByerspersonFrank LaughpersonChris WolfpersonJay StaffordpersonKineticistcompanyColinpersonPinball PastureproductPinsideproduct

Signals

  • ?

    industry_signal: IPDB, a foundational community resource for 23 years, showing signs of terminal decline with 93-96% reduction in update activity, failure to catalog modern releases, and 90% loss of search engine visibility

    high · 612 database changes in 2024 vs. peak of ~15,000+ in 2004; zero 2024-2025 releases added; keyword visibility dropped from 69,000 to 7,000; monthly traffic from 100,000+ to below 20,000

  • ?

    community_signal: Critical community data infrastructure (ROMs, schematics, historical documentation) concentrated in legacy website at risk of becoming inaccessible; community awareness of dependency on single aging platform

    high · Author questioning 'where the home is for things like game manuals and ROM files' and urging community to consider alternatives now; uncertainty about transition plans

  • $

    market_signal: Community migrating content discovery and reference use from IPDB to competing platforms (Pinside, YouTube, AI search) and Kineticist database seeing increased engagement

    high · Kineticist author discloses increased engagement in their database as IPDB declines; Pinside cited as alternative; users reporting IPDB no longer dominant in Google results

  • ?

    product_concern: IPDB experiencing chronic under-maintenance and update backlog, with no modern game entries since Venom (2023) and design/technical infrastructure deteriorating

    high · Only 16 of 56 modern major releases cataloged since 2020; design described as 'static'; users reporting 'more frequent technical issues'; 2025 pace (968 changes YTD) still far below 2023 (4,349)

  • ?

Topics

IPDB decline and institutional failureprimaryCommunity data infrastructure and archival concernsprimarySearch engine visibility and digital presence erosionprimaryModern pinball game cataloging gapsprimaryCompeting pinball databases and platforms (Pinside, Kineticist, OPDB)secondaryIPDB history and legacy (1997-2002 origins)secondaryCommunity conflict of interest in media coveragesecondaryDigital preservation of ROM files and technical documentationmentioned

Sentiment

neutral(0)

Transcript

web_scrape · $0.000

Like what you're reading? Get pinball news, analysis, and deep dives delivered to your inbox. Get pinball news, analysis, and deep dives delivered to your inbox. Taken alongside some other signals and community whisperings, though, I think IPDB might be dying. Here's why. IPDB has long been one of the most complete and detailed databases of pinball machines on the internet—the go-to resource for looking up information on old machines, historical tidbits, downloadable ROM files, and game schematics. Many consider it the backbone of the modern pinball community. A living relic of the early internet, IPDB traces its roots back to 1997—seven years after the founding of IMDb and four years before Wikipedia came online. That year, a Swedish pinball fan named David Byers created one of the first websites dedicated to pinball, called Pinball Pasture. In collaboration with Frank Laugh, the two grew the first iteration of the Internet Pinball Database to over 4,000 machine listings and 2,000 photos by 2001. Around that time, as updates slowed and other projects diverted their attention, a group of new hobbyists led by Chris Wolf got together and purchased the domain ipdb.org in December 2001. On March 22, 2002, Wolf announced the launch in the rec.games.pinball usenet group: "I'd like to announce a new replacement Pinball Database available on the Internet at http://www.ipdb.org... The work done by Frank, David and the others for the existing IPD site has been of immeasurable value to us all and is probably used by everyone reading this, but as their businesses have taken off, they've been unable to continue their excellent work. To prevent this work from being lost, and to continue expanding the database, a group was formed 3 months ago to rewrite the database from scratch." The data collected and maintained by David and Frank formed the backbone of IPDB as we know it today. Shortly after launch, Chris was joined by Jay Stafford, who assumed the role of Senior Editor, a role he continues to this day. While Chris settled into more of a background webmaster role, Jay became the face of the operation. As he described it in a 2011 interview with Skill-Shot magazine: "...I do everything else, which is provide content, interact with people, go to the shows, do what I call outreach which is just try to find pinball machines and pictures and data that we don't have and bring it into the site, collaborate with other historians and try to build history, and research history, so we can have things to say about the games rather than just some antiseptic listing of name, rank and serial number." With the help of a small group of dedicated volunteers, contributions from the community, and other forms of material support, the site steadily grew in size and ubiquity. Today it claims listings for 6,700 games, 80,846 images, and 6,031 other game-related files like ROMs and technical documentation. Visually, the site looks much like it did when it first launched—minimal, text-heavy, more substance than style. Over the last few years, despite pinball's general resurgence and the influx of new manufacturing companies, the pace of updates to the IPDB database has fallen off. The drop is particularly steep recently. In 2024, IPDB made only 612 changes to its database—a 93% drop in volume since 2020 and 96% decline since its peak in 2004. Updates in 2025 have ticked up to 968 changes (as of 12/31), but that's still way down from 2023's pace of 4,349 changes. On its own, a reduction in database updates isn't necessarily concerning. At a certain point, you run out of new material to process. But that brings us to the second troubling trend. IPDB has, for the most part, stopped adding information about modern pinball releases. Since 2020, the pinball community has seen roughly 56 new major launches of commercially available games. (For this exercise, I'm not counting home editions, remakes, remasters, anniversary editions, or, in the case of a company like Multimorphic, third-party modules.) IPDB has added only 16 of those releases to its database, with the last entry in 2023: Stern's Venom. It's the only game from 2023's crop of 13 releases to make it in. None of 2024 or 2025's releases have been added. That this coincides with the broader slowdown in database updates is telling. As one user on Pinside wrote recently, "It's so strange you can't even hardly put a game name and 'IPDB' in a Google search now and get it to show. It used to be within the first 3-4 search items by just throwing any game name in." There may be technical reasons for that specific issue, but the broader trend is clear: reach and visibility for IPDB content is lower than it's ever been. According to SEMRush data (a popular search data provider), at the end of 2013, IPDB.org regularly saw traffic of 100,000+ visitors per month. In November 2025, monthly visitors had dipped below 20,000. Looking at it another way: in February 2017, IPDB content had visibility within search engines for around 69,000 different keywords. That manifests as "search for a game name, get an IPDB page served as a result." Today, IPDB only has visibility for around 7,000 keywords, about a 90% drop. Some of this reflects broader industry trends as users move toward competing websites like Pinside, different forms of media like YouTube, and new technologies like AI search. So what do we have? A legacy website that's not consistently maintained, largely static in design and content, featuring increasingly outdated information, and experiencing more frequent technical issues. It's no wonder its prominence in the community is waning. The site could certainly limp along in this state for years to come as long as its hosting holds up. But every signal I see suggests an entity that may not be with us into the next decade, if not sooner. I should be transparent here: Kineticist operates our own pinball games database, and we've seen increased engagement as IPDB has declined. That obviously colors my perspective, which I feel should be clear. But I also think the data speaks for itself, and I'd be writing this piece regardless. The story is really about marking a moment in time and what happens when important community projects end, by choice or otherwise. I haven't reached out to Jay Stafford or other IPDB contributors for comment. I'm genuinely curious if there's a plan to revitalize the project or a transition in the works, as it would be a shame to lose all that data, and I'd be happy to cover it if so. In the meantime, for those thinking about where community data infrastructure goes next, OPDB.org, an open API service, is worth a look, even if it's not a 1:1 replacement. Pinside has its database. We have ours. I don't know where the home is for things like game manuals and ROM files. The community usually finds a way forward, but if these things are important to you, the time to start thinking about it is now. Colin is the chief pixel pusher at Kineticist. He's a lifetime gamer who became enamored with pinball after taking in a family copy of the 1979 classic Joker Poker (the EM version). Since then he's bought, sold and repaired many machines, competed in all kinds of tournaments, and contributes to This Week in Pinball, the New Robert Englunds Pinball League, and Pin-Masters of New Robert Englunds. Previously, Colin spent over a decade working in marketing for agencies and tech startups. He also started and ran a music blog, happy hour website, and wrote a regular craft beer review column for Central Track in Dallas. Once aspired to be an artsy film director.

Colin (Kineticist author) @ Current article — Disclosure of conflict of interest in the analysis

OPDB.org
product
SEMRushcompany
Stern Pinballcompany
Multimorphiccompany
This Week in Pinballorganization
Skill-Shot magazineorganization
Joker Poker (1979 EM)product
IMDbproduct
Wikipediaproduct
rec.games.pinballorganization
New England Pinball Leagueorganization

content_signal: IPDB being displaced by newer media and discovery mechanisms: YouTube, AI search engines, and real-time community platforms (Pinside) providing more current and accessible pinball information

high · Article notes shift toward YouTube and AI search; Pinside has its own database; users report IPDB no longer within first 3-4 Google results for game searches

  • ?

    personnel_signal: IPDB's long-time Senior Editor Jay Stafford remains the primary steward since 2002, with no evident succession planning or organizational structure to support project continuation if key personnel changes

    high · Author describes wanting to reach out to Jay Stafford and 'other IPDB contributors' regarding revitalization plans or transitions; no mention of organizational structure beyond Stafford and Wolf

  • ?

    historical_signal: Unique historical record of pinball industry spanning 6,700+ games, 80,000+ images, and technical documentation (ROMs, schematics) at risk due to IPDB's deterioration

    high · IPDB described as 'living relic of early internet' with irreplaceable archival collections; author notes 'it would be a shame to lose all that data'

  • ?

    business_signal: Kineticist (operating competing pinball database) and Pinside gaining community attention and engagement as IPDB falters, creating incentive for consolidation or migration

    high · Author discloses Kineticist 'has seen increased engagement as IPDB has declined' and acknowledges conflict of interest; notes Pinside, OPDB, and Kineticist as alternatives

  • ~

    sentiment_shift: Community sentiment shifting from treating IPDB as indispensable reference to questioning its reliability and forward viability, with users noting reduced search visibility and incomplete modern game data

    high · Pinside user quote expressing surprise at IPDB's disappeared search visibility; author's framing of IPDB as 'legacy website' with 'outdated information'

  • ?

    regulatory_signal: Community facing unclear succession and preservation path for critical pinball archival materials (ROMs, schematics, game manuals) if IPDB becomes fully inactive

    medium · Author states 'I don't know where the home is for things like game manuals and ROM files' and advocates for community to start thinking about alternatives now

  • ?

    event_signal: Article marks a watershed moment in pinball community awareness of IPDB's decline and potential end-of-life within the next decade, prompting discussion of succession and data preservation

    high · Author frames piece as 'marking a moment in time and what happens when important community projects end, by choice or otherwise'