

Camera option 2 is the best choice for viewing the tables in my opinion, and while they won’t look nearly as nice as the PC version, it does get the job done for most of them. (from the 60s to 90s) These tables weren’t riddled with text like modern Stern tables are today, and the widebody tables are really easy to see on the Switch’s tablet screen, and if for some reason the lighting isn’t that good, you can just tweak the lighting around the table to make the bulbs lighter and the room a bit darker, and that’ll usually make most of the tables visible. Well, luckily that issue isn’t as big of a problem in the normal Pinball Arcade, at least for most of the tables included.

In Stern, I mentioned that one of my biggest problems with those tables is that they were really, really hard to see. Due to the removal of a lot of tables, (more on that in a bit) all I can really judge are the 30 some tables we currently have, with some of the new ones not seen on the Wii U version, along with those I’ve previously played on Wii U and in Stern Pinball Arcade. However, The Pinball Arcade has seen a bit of some tweaks since then, for better and for worse, mainly due to the addition (and removal) of three new seasons never released on the Wii U version.

PINBALL ARCADE XBOX ONE REVIEW CODE
Thanks to Farsight Studios for the review code Title: The Pinball Arcadeīeing a port of the same game I reviewed for the Wii U back in 2016, usually I wouldn’t repeat things I already stated before.
