claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.032
Jersey Jack's Toy Story 4 Pinball criticized for poor IP choice, sparse design, and unsustainable pricing despite operator-friendly mechanics.
Toy Story 4 Pinball limited edition is $12,000 and collector's edition is $15,000
high confidence · Dennis cites official JJP pricing directly from This Week in Pinball's coverage
JJP has already shipped some limited editions and will produce collector's editions in fall
high confidence · Dennis states LEs were pre-built and shipped; CEs slated for fall production
The game features Tim Allen as Buzz via custom call-outs; Woody voice is done by Tom Hanks's brother
medium confidence · Dennis relays this but acknowledges uncertainty about Hanks relationship; notes voice quality fooled him
Most people agree Toy Story 4 alone is a worse licensing choice than original trilogy or first film only
high confidence · Tony and Dennis both confirm universal agreement among players they're aware of
Toy Story 4 playfield is significantly sparser than Godzilla Premium, which costs $3,000 less
high confidence · Dennis performs detailed mechanical feature comparison; Tony agrees assessment
The game is designed for inexperienced/casual players with long ball times and approachable code
medium confidence · Dennis notes JJP team wanted players to reach wizard mode; Tony confirms reports of accessibility
JJP dropped the standard edition because it wasn't selling well
medium confidence · Dennis states 'I heard they were selling like dogs' but qualifies as hearsay
Pinball is now exclusively positioned as a high-end collector market, not accessible to casual/location players
medium confidence · Tony and Dennis agree this pricing makes the game unviable for most operators despite theme/mechanics suitability
“Toy Story 4 is a winner for the common folk. You're all crazy. This is going to sell well 100%.”
Unknown quote from someone Dennis knows @ ~33:00 — Illustrates tone-deaf perspective on pricing accessibility; becomes a focal point for Dennis/Tony's criticism of who can actually afford $12k machines
“It's like if you call your boss because your car's broke down, he's like, well, why don't you just drive your other car?”
Tony @ ~35:00 — Analogy mocking the disconnect between $12k pinball pricing and everyday economic reality of 'common folk'
“I don't understand why I would pay another $3,000 for less of a game.”
Dennis @ ~43:00 — Core pricing criticism: LE is $3k more than Godzilla Premium but mechanically sparse by comparison
“It's like opposite day.”
Tony @ ~44:00 — Concise critique of backwards pricing strategy (more expensive, fewer features)
“This is a game that seems to be designed for a certain type of player, designed for fans of Toy Story 4. But they are not going to be able to play this game because it's not going to be operating anywhere. Nobody's going to be able to afford to operate it.”
Tony @ ~52:00 — Identifies core market failure: theme appeals to families/kids, but $12k price means no location placement
“JJP saw people flipping games and they're trying to make sure that money isn't being left on the table.”
Dennis @ ~46:00 — Articulates suspected business rationale: maximizing collector resale/flipping revenue at expense of wider market
“Sticking in 300 LEDs does not impress me... They're normal now.”
Tony @ ~45:00 — Dismisses LED count as marketing gimmick; notes commodity technology not worth premium pricing
“In so many ways, other than price really, it seems like it's a very operator-friendly game.”
Dennis — Acknowledges game design suits location/casual play despite pricing blocking that market
business_signal: JJP positioning exclusively as high-end collector market; dropping standard edition due to poor sales signals abandonment of operator/casual player tier
medium · Dennis: 'I heard they were selling like dogs'; notes this was 'smart' decision but reflects strategic market shift. Tony: game won't operate anywhere because no one can afford $12k location buy
community_signal: Market accessibility concern: $12k-$15k pricing creates barrier for both casual players and most operators despite game being designed as approachable/location-friendly
high · Tony: 'this is a game that seems to be designed for a certain type of player... But they are not going to be able to play this game because it's not going to be operating anywhere'
design_philosophy: Community consensus that Toy Story 4 was poor licensing choice compared to original trilogy or first film; game theme misaligned with IP quality perception
high · Both hosts confirm universal agreement from players they know; Tony states 'I don't know anyone who doesn't agree'; even fans of the game agree original trilogy would be better
design_philosophy: Toy Story 4 designed for inexperienced/casual players with long ball times and approachable first-side wizard mode; conflicts with premium-only collector pricing model
medium · Dennis: 'I guess you do a side as Woody and a side as Buzz... people without high skill would be able to get through one of those paths'; Tony confirms reports support this
licensing_signal: Toy Story 4 may have been only available licensing option from Disney/Pixar or Pixar-controlled; three-year gap since film release suggests licensing was constrained
groq_whisper · $0.209
low · Dennis speculates Toy Story 4 was only accessible license; wonders if walking away would have been better strategy; notes surprise at release timing
market_signal: Game designed with explicit appeal to Toy Story fan families and casual/location players but priced out of reach for that demographic
high · Tony: 'kids will know Toy Story. They're not going to have money to buy a $12,000 game, but they would have money to put money into one'; game won't operate anywhere
market_signal: JJP using LED and cosmetic differentiators (powder coat, RGB count) as primary LE/CE distinction rather than mechanical features
medium · Dennis notes CE has 450 LEDs vs LE's 300, red vs blue powder coat, Pixar Luxor knob; minimal mechanical differentiation between tiers
market_signal: Toy Story 4 LE priced at $3,000 premium to Godzilla Premium despite demonstrably fewer mechanical features; community questioning sustainability of three-tier pricing model
high · Dennis detailed mechanical comparison; both note sparse playfield relative to cost. Dennis: 'I don't understand why I would pay another $3,000 for less of a game'
announcement: Jersey Jack Pinball officially announced Toy Story 4 Pinball with two tiers (LE $12k, CE $15k); LEs already shipping, CEs coming fall
high · Dennis cites official pricing and production timeline from This Week in Pinball coverage; announcement was official JJP reveal
product_concern: LED count (300 LE / 450 CE) positioned as premium differentiator but perceived as commoditized feature; not sufficient justification for $3k price premium
high · Tony: 'Sticking in 300 LEDs does not impress me... They're normal now. They're no big deal.' Dennis agrees LED programming cost not worth price delta