claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.031
Don grapples with FOMO over Pulp Fiction LE sell-out amid March's game release avalanche.
Pulp Fiction was developed by Raw Thrills and will be manufactured by Chicago Gaming Company, releasing in October
high confidence · Direct statement about game origins and October production timeline
Pulp Fiction limited edition has sold out; standard edition remains available at ~$7,500-$9,500
high confidence · Don reports checking distributor inventory and finding LEs gone
Cactus Canyon pre-orders still have not been fulfilled and should have been completed by now
high confidence · Direct statement about ongoing delays without explanation from CGC
American Pinball has produced under 500 units per game historically
medium confidence · Don's estimation based on observation; states 'I don't have the official numbers'
Toy Story pinball prices dropped within one year post-release
medium confidence · Don mentions this as a lesson learned about waiting on premium titles
Foo Fighters limited edition sold out; premium edition still available with customization options viable
high confidence · Direct statement about availability and ongoing customization project with Pinball Refinery
Pulp Fiction LE topper costs approximately $1,500 more than standard edition and cannot be easily obtained aftermarket
high confidence · Don calculates pricing difference and discusses secondary market options
“Man, is FOMO hitting anybody else as hard as it is right now?”
Don @ Opening — Sets the central theme of the episode
“And sure enough, the thing is sold out. Now, all I've been seeing is these new limited collector's edition trim level lines are being released... but dang it, now that it's not available, I don't freaking want it, man. my FOMO is eating me up.”
Don @ Mid-episode — Core confession about psychological FOMO effect on purchasing desire
“If history's lessons have taught us anything, especially if you're a Cactus Canyon pre-orderer, you still have not gotten your game, and I feel like they should have all been made by now.”
Don @ Mid-episode — Raises critical concern about Chicago Gaming Company production reliability
“The special editions, are they going to hold that $7,500 value given that they are an unlimited theoretical production line and they can be gotten fairly easily?”
Don @ Late episode — Questions long-term value proposition of non-limited editions
“I'm just sharing on a late night, on a Thursday, the FOMO I've been feeling with Pulp Fiction. I think I'm going to get over it. You know, it's like the girl that got away.”
Don @ Closing — Philosophical reflection on FOMO and loss aversion
business_signal: Chicago Gaming Company's October production timeline for Pulp Fiction creates 6-month wait with payment ($1,000 deposit) secured upfront; uncertainty around whether delays will recur and impact delivery dates
high · Don questions: 'Are they putting it off until October because they think by then they'll be caught up with their Cactus Canyon production? Is the production of Pulp Fiction going to run into any issues?'
community_signal: Don's Pinball Podcast achieved rapid success exceeding creator's 100-episode stretch goal within first quarter; merchandise sales, community interactions, and event attendance growing
high · Don: 'I just started this in january just for fun... I'm already 25 plus episodes deep... doesn't look like it's slowing down' and merchandise orders via email with international shipping
competitive_signal: March release avalanche (Queen, Scooby-Doo, Foo Fighters, Godfather, Galactic Tank Force) creating market saturation and FOMO fragmentation; limited collector capital stretched across multiple premium titles
high · Don: 'Man, is FOMO hitting anybody else as hard as it is right now?... This avalanche of new content' and 'I'm probably in too deep... What should I be sending my $10,000 checks to?'
leak_detection: Pulp Fiction pinball rumors proved accurate pre-announcement; Raw Thrills involvement, single-level playfield design, and October production timeline all confirmed through media interviews
high · Don: 'These rumors when they are strong and consistent they seem to be bearing out to fruition' and confirms all rumored details matched official announcements and designer interviews
groq_whisper · $0.048
manufacturing_signal: American Pinball maintains low production volumes (~500 units per game) as deliberate strategy; Galactic Tank Force expected to follow same pattern with unknown tank kit availability
medium · Don: 'American Pinball is somebody that hasn't done a whole lot of production numbers... I don't think they've turned over 500 of each machine. They seem to be built meticulously and almost deliberately like not just cramped through an assembly line'
market_signal: Secondary market is active for LE spots; someone offered $500 to acquire Pulp Fiction LE pre-order, indicating strong demand-supply mismatch for limited inventory
high · Don reports seeing Pinside post offering $500 to buy someone's LE spot; distributed inventory all confirmed sold out
market_signal: Premium LE pricing model ($10,000+) questioned as sustainable when standard editions offer 90% of gameplay/features at $7,500; market showing signs of LE demand saturation (Godfather, Scooby-Doo easily available)
medium · Don notes Godfather and Scooby-Doo collector's editions 'can be gotten from anywhere' and are 'still available'; contrasts with Pulp Fiction LE instant sell-out
market_signal: Pulp Fiction LE commanded $1,500 premium over standard edition ($9,500 vs $7,500) primarily for cosmetic elements (chrome, topper); insufficient differentiation to justify premium for cost-conscious buyers given aftermarket upgrade paths
high · Don's detailed pricing breakdown and analysis of whether topper justifies $1,500 premium
product_strategy: Cactus Canyon continues to experience unexplained production delays with no communication from manufacturer; raises credibility concerns for future Chicago Gaming Company projects like Pulp Fiction
high · Don states 'Cactus Canyon pre-orderers still have not gotten your game... should have all been made by now' and 'I haven't heard a lot of talk or chatter coming from Chicago Gaming Company'
product_concern: Aftermarket customization pathways (expression lighting kits, powder-coating, art blade swaps) are viable for premium titles but limited availability on some kits (Rush example) creates secondary FOMO around LE exclusivity
medium · Don discusses Foo Fighters expression lighting: 'If it's like Rush, which it may very well be, where expression light aftermarket kits are just not available... then maybe you should have got one'
sentiment_shift: Don's interest in Pulp Fiction reversed from dismissal (before LE sold out) to FOMO-driven desire (after LE unavailable), illustrating psychological scarcity effect on perceived value
high · Explicit before/after comparison: 'I was like, you know what, this is a game I do not need' vs 'dang it, now that it's not available, I don't freaking want it, man'