claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.031
Tommy finds rare Big Game prototype with plastic playfield and European import history.
The Internet Pinball Database states Stern was prototyping Big Game with both traditional and new plastic playfield models in early 1980, and no plastic playfield has been documented until now.
high confidence · Tommy Skinner, citing the IPDB article from Amusement Review (Jan-Feb 1980, page 6)
The discovered machine features a plexiglass-layered playfield (quarter-inch thick) over thinner plywood, preserving artwork perfectly, a technique used by some early 1980s pinball companies.
high confidence · Tommy Skinner, describing physical examination of the machine and comparison to Dragon and Electra examples
The prototype Big Game uses a full Meteor cabinet head with Meteor-labeled wiring harnesses and six-digit displays rather than seven-digit production displays.
high confidence · Tommy Skinner, based on direct inspection and ROM verification
The prototype playfield has different artwork than production Big Game, featuring water and animals (including an elephant head instead of tiger head) and different color screens, possibly due to cost-cutting or material limitations.
high confidence · Tommy Skinner describing visual differences and community speculation about artistic choices
A Schneider Import (Hamburg) sticker on the apron suggests the machine was in Germany at some point, though it's unclear if it was built there or sent for a European show.
medium confidence · Tommy Skinner, noting the import company sticker and speculating about European connections
The machine was serviced by Mike Romer (Amusement Game Service), whose business card was found inside, indicating local Chicago maintenance history.
high confidence · Tommy Skinner, finding business card and community identification of the servicer
IFPA changed charity tournament rules requiring one-month advance scheduling, reducing the number of impromptu charity tournaments compared to earlier 'Whopper' point rules.
medium confidence · Taylor Maurice, discussing IFPA policy changes and their impact on charity event frequency
“holy shit, I think this might be the prototype”
Tommy Skinner@ 11:31 — Tommy's moment of realization when connecting the unusual playfield artwork to the IPDB reference about undocumented plastic playfield prototypes
“he called me back within one minute and he said i have almost 40 messages what is this thing”
Tommy Skinner (relaying seller Jason's reaction)@ 12:50 — Demonstrates the rapid community interest once the machine was revealed in collector groups
“this is the prototype of their wide body cab i mean like this is like harry williams was working on this game holy shit”
Tommy Skinner@ 15:39 — Emotional acknowledgment of the machine's historical significance and designer provenance
“I'm absolutely a collector, but I'm not collecting this, like shoving it in my basement and not letting anyone else see it. I want to put this out. I want people to play it.”
Tommy Skinner (to seller Jason)@ 28:17 — Articulates Tommy's philosophy of stewardship and community access for rare machines
“to me, it's a piece of history. Like, being the prototype, I imagine Harry Williams touched that machine at some point in time.”
Tommy Skinner@ 28:48 — Reflects the historical reverence and emotional connection collectors have to early prototype machines
“You're restoring a big game prototype. Yeah, you're right. I see the value and the correctness in what you're saying.”
Tommy Skinner@ 22:29 — Tommy's acceptance of Taylor's argument to preserve the machine in its original Meteor cabinet configuration
“it's not like you're you're not restoring a big game. You're restoring a big game prototype.”
Taylor Maurice — Core argument for preservation philosophy: treating the prototype as a historically distinct artifact
collector_signal: Discovery of what appears to be the only known Big Game plastic-playfield prototype, confirming documented historical reference in IPDB and changing the known population of rare machines
high · Tommy's research of IPDB showing Amusement Review reference to undocumented plastic playfield models, physical inspection confirming plastic layer, unique artwork and construction details
historical_signal: Evidence of early 1980s Stern experimental approach to playfield preservation using plexiglass layers, and reuse of existing cabinet heads and electronics for prototyping
high · Meteor head, Meteor wiring harnesses, thinner plywood construction, comparative analysis with Dragon Fist paint-over evidence
restoration_signal: Discussion of whether to restore prototype to production Big Game specs vs. preserve original Meteor cabinet configuration; decision made to maintain original state
high · Extended discussion between Tommy and Taylor about restoration approach; Tommy's final decision to keep Meteor head and white cabinet but add Meteor backglass and potentially seven-digit conversion
machine_intel: Big Game prototype has documented European connection (Schneider Import Hamburg sticker) and Chicago service history (Mike Romer business card), suggesting international movement at some point
medium · Sticker placement under glass on apron; business card identification by community members; speculation about European show or manufacture possibility
community_signal: Prototype discovery triggered rapid community response with ~40 inquiries within hours of reposting on Facebook; community forums (Pinside classic Stern group, big game group) facilitated research and identification
positive(0.82)— Strong positive sentiment around the discovery and its historical significance. Enthusiasm tempered by respectful discussion of restoration ethics and preservation philosophy. Genuine emotion about community helping in hurricane relief balanced with lighter tone during main pinball discussion.
groq_whisper · $0.238
The prototype's playfield design includes unique hanging ball guides mounted to posts rather than direct playfield mounting, possibly to accommodate the plastic layer.
medium confidence · Tommy Skinner, analyzing design differences and speculating about plastic-related constraints
high · Jason's report of 40 messages; machine appearing in Stern Electronics Club and Big Game Club on Pinside within hours
product_concern: Prototype arrived with damaged Meteor backglass due to seller's improper breakdown technique; rectifier board requires professional repair work
high · Tommy noting backglass breakage; plan to have John Dozier repair rectifier board in Springfield; scheduled completion December/January
design_innovation: Big Game prototype used quarter-inch plexiglass layer over thinner plywood playfield to preserve artwork; featured hanging ball guides mounted to posts rather than direct playfield mounting, possibly to accommodate plastic layer
medium · Physical inspection showing plexiglass layer; comparison to Dragon, Electra, and other early-80s machines using similar techniques; analysis of ball guide design as adaptation to plastic construction
artwork_analysis: Prototype artwork differs significantly from production Big Game: features water/waterfall theme instead of jungle foliage, elephant head instead of tiger head, more screen-printed colors, mountain imagery above pop bumpers
high · Tommy's detailed comparison of playfield imagery; observation that artwork matches style but uses different subject matter; community member noting additional screen-printed colors in prototype
industry_signal: IFPA shifted from immediate 'Whopper' point awards for charity tournaments to one-month advance scheduling requirement; hosts attribute decrease in charity events to this policy change
medium · Taylor Maurice's discussion of rule change rationale and community impact; acknowledgment that previous system was abused for Whopper points rather than genuine charitable intent
content_signal: Tommy extensively documenting prototype discovery and research on Pinside forums and working with content creators to preserve historical record and photos
high · Tommy posting photos and story to Pinside Big Game Club and Stern Electronics Club; attempting outreach to Doug Watson through podcast intermediary; offering playfield scanning to Fantastic Pinball
operational_signal: Tommy planning to put Big Game prototype into regular play at venues (Pinball at the Zoo, state finals hosting) rather than private collection, emphasizing community access and historical preservation
high · Tommy's explicit statement to Jason about not hoarding in basement; plan to have prototype operational for state finals in January; intent to display alongside other rare machines like blue Cheetah