Rescue 911
ManufacturerGottlieb
Release dateMay, 1994
SystemSystem 3
DesignBill Parker
ArtworkConstantino Mitchell, David Moore, Jeanine Mitchell
MusicDuane Decker
SoundCraig Beierwaltes
Production run4,000

Rescue 911 is a pinball machine designed by Bill Parker and released by Gottlieb in 1994. The game is based on the TV show of the same name.[1][2][3]

Description

The gameplay features some disaster rescue scenarios e.g. saving people from wildfires and flash floods and emergency medical missions such as delivering a parturient mother to a nearby hospital.

The playfield most notably includes a magnetic helicopter toy that can lift the ball from the ground. The wizard mode starts a light and sound show including an EKG heartbeat sound similar to the metamorphosis effects on Bride of Pinbot. The game does not have images or the voice of Rescue 911 TV show host William Shatner because Gottlieb did not get the rights from him. A planned reference was cancelled in an advanced state of development; as a result four stand up targets that should spell TREK are left empty.[4]

Gameplay

The player can call 911 by shooting the ball into a sinkhole about halfway up the playfield on the left hand side. After the machine instructs the player to, the player can then use the flipper buttons to lift the ball up so the helicopter toy can grab it using a magnet. The player can then use the flipper buttons again to drop the ball in different skill spots as it moves across the playfield. The Sinkhole that activates 911 calls may also lock the ball. After another ball is launched, the 911 call activates, and activates multiball.

Digital versions

Rescue 911 is available as a licensed table of The Pinball Arcade for several platforms.


References

  1. "Internet Pinball Machine Database: 'Rescue 911'". Ipdb.org. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  2. Shalhoub, Michael. The Pinball Compendium: 1982 to Present. Schiffer Publishing, Limited. p. 188. ISBN 9780764341076.
  3. Rossignoli, Marco. The Complete Pinball Book: Collecting the Game and Its History. Schiffer Publishing, Limited. p. 225. ISBN 9780764337857.
  4. "Rescue 911 rule sheet". Retrieved 2016-03-31.
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