claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.025
Fabulous Fantasies announces King Of Diamonds EM reproduction tapping rising retro pinball demand.
EM games have appreciated significantly in value; Fireball purchased new in 1972 for $799 now sells for $3000-$4500
high confidence · Herb Silvers directly comparing historical and current market prices
Modern pinball has lost the great skill shots of past machines
medium confidence · Herb Silvers and team's stated motivation for King Of Diamonds project, opinion-based criticism
King Of Diamonds uses approximately 70% original parts from the 1960s Gottlieb game
high confidence · Herb Silvers explaining mechanical compatibility
Playfields will be assembled in China with parts manufactured there where not currently available
high confidence · Herb Silvers discussing production strategy
Pre-orders for King Of Diamonds have been very strong, with Gold Editions likely to sell out before production
medium confidence · Herb Silvers claiming pre-order success; actual numbers not provided
Interest in EM games is driven by nostalgia from 35-60 year old players, younger 'retro' enthusiasts, families seeking clean entertainment, and preference for simpler gameplay over complex modern rules
high confidence · Multiple industry sources (Michael Schiess, Jim Dietrick) identifying convergent demand drivers
Estimated cost of King Of Diamonds is $3,000
high confidence · Herb Silvers providing pricing
“A fully restored or mint original EM goes for about the same as a new game...I cannot even keep a 60's Gottlieb in the store anymore. They go as fast as they are finished.”
Herb Silvers — Demonstrates strong collector demand for vintage EM games and market scarcity
“We felt the modern pinball no longer has some of the great skill shots of the past machines. We thought if you take the greats shots of the past and convert it to new technology how fun that would be.”
Herb Silvers — Core design philosophy behind the reproduction project
“There are new people visiting the Ju Ju every weekend...There are a lot of 35 to 60 year olds who played these in the arcades of yesteryear and want to re-live a happy time in their lives.”
Michael Schiess (Lucky Ju Ju owner) — Industry operator confirming resurgent EM interest from multiple demographic segments
“Vintage machines are pretty straightforward and that has a big appeal...Many of our guests feel the new machines have too many gadgets, too much 'blind activity' and strategies.”
Michael Schiess — Articulates key market preference difference: simplicity/accessibility of EM vs complexity of modern games
“I think this is due in part to diminished production and advancement in pinball technology and variety, but I believe it has more to do with nostalgia and the coming of age of a generation who grew up playing pinball.”
Jim Dietrick (Pinball Revival) — Industry specialist analysis of demand drivers for vintage EM games
“I'm not sure there is a real market for that type of game. Purist collectors would not be satisfied with the reproduction as it does depart significantly in look and feel from the original.”
Jim Dietrick — Industry skepticism about reproduction market viability; identifies potential positioning problem between EM purists and modern casual buyers
“I hope this is the start to get this hobby back to where it belongs on the top of the amusement chain. My ultimate goal is to see Gottlieb out there again building games for the hobby and the operators at a reasonable price.”
business_signal: Reproduction market faces strategic positioning risk: purist EM collectors may reject non-authentic electronics; modern casual players may find $3,000 price point uncompetitive vs current solid-state games.
medium · Jim Dietrick explicitly states: 'I'm not sure there is a real market for that type of game...trying to appease both the EM and SS camps and doesn't have adequate appeal for either.' Michael Schiess partially agrees, expressing preference for authentic originals despite appreciation for reproduction viability.
sentiment_shift: Industry operators and specialists are divided on EM reproduction viability; moderate optimism from manufacturers/sellers vs skepticism from purist specialists about market positioning.
high · Herb Silvers reports strong pre-orders; Michael Schiess sees value as museum piece but prefers originals; Jim Dietrick expresses fundamental doubts about market existence due to positioning between two segments.
community_signal: Multiple age demographics driving EM game resurgence: 35-60 year old nostalgia players, younger retro enthusiasts, families seeking clean entertainment alternatives to violent video games.
high · Michael Schiess identifies three distinct demographic drivers with observable behavior at Lucky Ju Ju museum; Jim Dietrick confirms 'coming of age of a generation who grew up playing pinball and now has disposable income.'
market_signal: EM/electromechanical pinball games experiencing a significant resurgence in collector and casual player interest, driven by nostalgia, generational preferences, and perceived simplicity advantages over modern complex rule sets.
high · Multiple independent sources (Herb Silvers, Michael Schiess, Jim Dietrick) all confirming sharp increase in EM demand and prices; cited reasons include nostalgia from older players, retro appeal for younger audiences, family-friendly 'cleanliness' vs video games, and preference for straightforward gameplay.
mixed(0.55)— Herb Silvers and operators Michael Schiess express optimism about EM resurgence and reproduction viability. However, Jim Dietrick expresses significant skepticism about whether the reproduction market can succeed, believing it falls between two stools (neither authentic enough for purists nor compelling enough for casual players at the price point). Industry enthusiasm is tempered by genuine uncertainty about market positioning.
raw_text · $0.000
Herb Silvers — States ambitious vision for revival of Gottlieb brand and broader pinball industry revitalization
licensing_signal: Mondial (Gottlieb brand owner) is actively authorizing reproduction/modernization of classic Gottlieb game IP; positions brand owner as enabler of retro revival strategy.
high · Robert Fesjian of Mondial personally authorized project; Gottlieb LLC and Mondial will handle foreign exports and quality standards oversight.
market_signal: EM game prices have risen significantly; classic 1960s Gottlieb machines are in high demand and scarce; Fireball example shows 4-5x appreciation from 1972 ($799) to current market ($3000-$4500).
high · Herb Silvers reports 60s Gottlieb machines 'go as fast as they are finished' and cannot keep them in stock; Jim Dietrick confirms price rises due to scarcity and increased non-collector buyers competing with collectors for limited inventory.
announcement: Fabulous Fantasies announces King Of Diamonds modern reproduction combining 1960s Gottlieb playfield design with modern electronic controls, authorized by Mondial (current Gottlieb brand owner).
high · Official announcement with detailed specifications, pricing ($3,000), production timeline (summer 2024), team composition, and authorized by Robert Fesjian of Mondial.
supply_chain_signal: King Of Diamonds playfield assembly and manufacturing outsourced to China to manage costs and leverage manufacturing capacity; some parts will be reverse-exported to US for spare parts sales through Pinball Resource.
high · Herb Silvers: 'playfields will be assembled in China...parts already available will be sent to China while those not currently available will be manufactured there...with some sent back to the US as spares.'