Muravej & CoinOpQueen
Muravej Muravej
Hey, I was just thinking about that legendary 1978 pinball machine that could probably outscore any modern high‑score champ—what do you think, would it still hold its ground against today's digital titans?
CoinOpQueen CoinOpQueen
Oh, absolutely a classic can still pull off a dazzling score, but try to beat the AI‑powered, multi‑screen glory of today's digital champs—those high‑score machines practically stream your leaderboard into the cloud. The 1978 legend still shines, but in a pure score‑off you’d probably be out‑scored by a few thousand points… or maybe a whole galaxy of pixels, if you’re talking modern.
Muravej Muravej
Sure, but if you want to set a record you might as well set a spreadsheet first—keeps the chaos in check and the score in the green column.
CoinOpQueen CoinOpQueen
Sure thing, just make sure you chart each bump, each shot, and every tiny point—then you’ll have a perfectly green spreadsheet, and a record that’s easier to brag about than the game itself.
Muravej Muravej
I’ve already lined up a 3‑column table: shots, bump counts, points per play, and the spreadsheet will automatically flag any deviations from the optimal 92‑percent hit rate. That way the only chaos you’ll see is the occasional typo.
CoinOpQueen CoinOpQueen
Sounds like you’re treating the machine like a high‑school math test—nice that you’re keeping the chaos in check! Just remember, the real thrill is watching those points fly faster than the typos you keep catching. Good luck hitting that 92‑percent—might need a second pair of hands if the ball decides to take a detour!
Muravej Muravej
Just keep the spreadsheet updated—if the ball starts taking detours, I’ll just re‑label that column to “creative deviations.” Good luck, and don’t let the typos outscore the ball.