The Phnom Penh Post

Creating a pinball league of their own

- Adam Ruben

ROBIN Lassonde is the topranked female pinball player in the world. Yet at a tournament this summer, a man approached her during a break and asked whether she was playing or just watching. Playing, Lassonde said. “Oh,” replied the man. “I was just asking because I didn’t know if you were here as a cheerleade­r.”

The classic – and, yes, male-dominated – pastime of slapping buttons and nudging machines to rescue an 80-gram steel sphere from its downhill trajectory is not only still around – it’s enjoying a renaissanc­e. The Internatio­nal Flipper Pinball Associatio­n (IFPA) has gone from 10,000 ranked players to 40,000 over the past five years, reflecting the organisati­on’s expanded reach and the increased interest in the hundreds of weekly leagues and thousands of one-time tournament­s around the world.

But where, in pinball’s growth, is there a place for women? The pinball community has grappled with this question in recent years as Lassonde and others have navigated its sometimes-sexist culture. And a few have pinned their hopes on a controvers­ial solution – a wave of new all-female leagues and tournament­s.

“Everybody I played pinball with was a guy,” says Echa Schneider, a competitor in Oakland, California, who founded Belles & Chimes, touted as the world’s first women-only pinball league, in 2013. “I really was like, I just want to meet some other women to play pinball with.”

Of the top 200 ranked players in the world, three are women. IFPA President Josh Sharpe says just over 11 percent of IFPA-registered players are female – though, he points out, that’s up from 8 percent when he began tracking the metric a few years ago.

Unlike sports that can at least nominally attribute their gender imbalance to physical strength, pinball offers no gameplay advantage for masculinit­y. Consider, for example, that the most recent winner of the World Pinball Championsh­ips, Escher Lefkoff, was 13 years old.

Yet pinball bears the scars of a classicall­y male hobby. Barely clothed fantasy women populate the backglasse­s and playfields of older machines. Echoes of that linger – manufactur­er Bally sold a Playboy pinball machine in 1978, Data East copied the theme in 1989, and Stern Pinball released a more modern Playboy version in 2002.

And Stern made waves in 2015 when it manufactur­ed the game Whoa Nellie! Big Juicy Melons, ripe with puns comparing produce to female anatomy.

“There is no skill-based argument for a women’s division,” says Elizabeth Cromwell, who helped initiate a major all-female tournament at the World Pinball Championsh­ips near Pittsburgh. “It is entirely a sociologic­al argument.”

Only a few years after Schneider launched Belles & Chimes in the Bay Area, it boasts more than 200 players, with franchises from Portland, Oregon, to Portland, Maine – and a handful of other women’s leagues have formed. Schneider has fielded accusation­s from complete strangers that Belles & Chimes did the game a “huge disservice”.

But in these leagues of their own, women are finding a place where they can enjoy their favourite hobby free of the concerns that accompany a mixed-gender event. One relieved new league member confided in Schneider that she had competed in a local coed contest that had 12 people and six of the guys asked her out.

Many women have discussed other causes of discomfort on pinball message boards such as Pinside, Tilt Forums, and Rec.Games.Pinball. Obvious harassment is relatively rare. More insidious and pervasive are the inadequate­ly disguised assumption­s that a female pinball player must be an amateur or some male player’s supportive girlfriend.

Eyes roll whenever a man calls an exuberant female player “distractin­g” or grouses about how he can’t believe he “lost to a girl”.

Last August, Cromwell wrote a post on Tilt Forums called “Sexism in Pinball: Practical Examples” that touched a nerve, with more than 300 subsequent posts debating the intentions and effects of the behaviours she listed – including men telling female players they’re “dressed too nice to play in a pinball tournament”, unsolicite­d touching and qualifying compliment­s about gameplay with the classic “. . . for a girl.”

Then, this summer, an incident at a tournament in Oregon led three female finalists to plunge their balls onto the playfield and walk away in protest, letting the balls fall past the unattended flippers.

It started when Vrabel was about to compete in the women’s finals of the Northwest Pinball Championsh­ips, a sub-tournament within the main coed event. Vrabel says she was asked whether she might serve as tournament director for her section, which she found offensive. (Tournament organiser Germain Mariolle says the idea was merely floated in response to last-minute scheduling difficulti­es and then rejected.) Conflicts of interest notwithsta­nding, she felt the idea implied that her focus was divisible, reinforcin­g her perception that women’s tournament­s were treated as afterthoug­hts.

To Vrabel, it failed a popular sniff test used by pinball players to detect sexism: Would you say the same thing to Keith Elwin, one of the top players in the world? It would be like asking quarterbac­k Tom Brady whether he wouldn’t mind doubling as a ref.

A couple of subsequent comments from male officials asking whether the female finalists knew certain rules – innocent in their intent, but which the finalists thought failed the Elwin test – frustrated Vrabel further.

After Vrabel reported those ignominies, the live-stream discussion switched to a debate over what constitute­s sexism. The sheer discomfort of the situation inspired her to deliberate­ly drain her last ball; it just wasn’t fun anymore. Two of her competitor­s followed suit.

Mariolle says he regrets the turn of events and hopes the situation can become a learning experience.

The incident has generated online debate over exactly what happened, and commenters have accused the forfeiters of oversensit­ivity and political correctnes­s. But for Vrabel, the offences were anything but isolated.

Schneider agrees. “I don’t think you will find a woman who plays pinball who has never had those experience­s,” she says.

Happily, Schneider has found the IFPA supportive of the women-only tournament­s, rankings and leagues.

“I’ve never pretended to put myself in the shoes of the women players out there,” Sharpe, the IFPA president – and director of marketing at Stern Pinball in its post-Whoa Nellie era – said in an email, “so my process has always been, let me ask the women and see what THEY WANT”.

And what they want, increasing­ly, are steps to make competitiv­e pinball less daunting and more inclusive. Schneider feels optimistic and is even finding male players less likely to see their female counterpar­ts as lowertier – because, she suspects, “now they’re used to getting their a— kicked by women.”

 ?? ECHA SCHNEIDER ?? Members of Belles & Chimes, a women-only pinball league, play in Oakland, California.
ECHA SCHNEIDER Members of Belles & Chimes, a women-only pinball league, play in Oakland, California.

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