Edmonton Journal

PINBALL BOUNCES BACK

As leagues and tournament­s proliferat­e, more women are exercising their flipper fingers

- MIKAELA LEFRAK

WASHINGTON It’s a balmy spring evening, and the patio in front of Lyman’s Tavern in Washington, D.C., is deserted. Inside, people hover around a row of pinball machines: Attack From Mars, Star Wars, Eight Ball Deluxe, Red and Ted’s Road Show. The mechanical sounds of the games mix with players’ chatter; it feels like a carnival has been squeezed inside a shoebox.

Some of the region’s best pinball players are here, participat­ing in a charity pinball tournament for a local library branch, one of many tournament­s that Lyman’s regularly hosts.

At the Pabst Can Crusher, the first machine in the line, Stephanie Traub drops in a coin and starts to play.

A State Department lawyer by day, Traub, 37, is the top-ranked woman in Washington and 19th in the country, according to the Internatio­nal Flipper Pinball Associatio­n, an organizati­on that tracks pinball players. Men and women regularly compete against each other in tournament­s, though increasing­ly women like Traub are organizing their own leagues and tournament­s to encourage more women to play.

“This game is awful,” she says as her ball falls past the flippers, ending her turn. “Argh!” she groans. Game over.

Today, pinball is having a resurgence as a hobby and bar activity. Traub says if she wanted to, she could compete somewhere every night of the week.

Scott Nash, founder and chief executive of grocery chain Mom’s Organic Market, owns about 40 machines; a new one can set you back about US$6,000. A successful businessma­n and grown man — he’s 54 — he likes to spend his free time flicking a tiny metal ball around a big box decorated with cartoons.

As a kid, he says, he used to ride his bike to an arcade to play pinball with quarters stolen from his mother’s purse. Playing now still fills him with that same intoxicati­ng mix of competitiv­e drive and solitary Zen.

“It’s the perfect combinatio­n of luck and skill,” he says. “It is, to me, a perfect hobby.”

Like many other area pinballers, Traub considers the pinball room in the College Park Mom’s store to be one of the best places in the region to hone skills, due to the variety of machines spanning pinball’s three ages: electromec­hanical machines dating to the ’30s, classic games from the ’70s and ’80s, and modern machines outfitted with microchips and complex computing systems.

Traub plays in weekly tournament­s there and often broadcasts her games on the live-streaming platforms Twitch and Facebook Live. They typically attract about 1,000 unique viewers, Traub says, but they’re among the small fish in the growing pinball video ecosystem. One Twitch account, Deadflip, has 2.7 million unique views. Watching pinball online is an important way to improve your game; it helps familiariz­e you with machines that you might need to play on during a tournament.

Great pinball players have different strategies for every machine they encounter. Some tournament­s use only classic machines, which have shorter game times and smaller flippers than newer ones. Other tournament­s have participan­ts play rounds on every era of machine.

And some machines are heavier than others, which makes them harder to “nudge” — that’s when a player bumps or tilts the table to shift the ball’s trajectory. Many manufactur­ers even install tilting mechanisms to keep players from nudging games too hard. Nudging is one of the few areas of the game where physical strength comes into play.

In most of the tournament­s Traub participat­es in, she’s one of the only women. Men don’t have much of a natural physical advantage in pinball — no woman I spoke to had any difficulti­es with nudging — but it remains a male-dominated activity in the same way that video games and bar sports like pool are.

Plus, many of the most popular pinball machines are decorated with cartoonish or sexualized images of women. Traub herself owns the game Baywatch, complete with Pamela Anderson in a small red swimsuit.

One of the few other women players at Lyman’s, Mollie Lee, says that she does consider the images and themes of many of the machines to be sexist, but the 27-year-old likes playing on them enough to put on blinders.

The biggest pinball maker in the country, Stern, still designs new games (including, recently, one with a Game of Thrones theme), so she hopes more non-offensive ones are on the way.

“I can’t wait for the day that there’s a Sex and the City pinball machine. It’s gonna happen,” she says, grinning.

Meanwhile, Traub’s gone back to play Pabst Can Crusher again. No one’s watching her closely — it’s bad form to stand over a machine while someone is playing. She has a good turn, and when she’s done, she’s smiling.

“It’s very fulfilling, in a weird way,” she says. “You’re alone, but you don’t feel alone.”

 ?? PHOTOS: ANDRE CHUNG/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? U.S. State Department lawyer Stephanie Traub became a competitiv­e pinball player on the Washington, D.C. pinball scene in 2016.
PHOTOS: ANDRE CHUNG/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST U.S. State Department lawyer Stephanie Traub became a competitiv­e pinball player on the Washington, D.C. pinball scene in 2016.
 ??  ?? Scott Nash, the chief executive of MOM’S Organic Market grocery chain and the owner of VUK, a Washington, D.C., pinball and pizza parlour, calls pinball “the perfect combinatio­n of luck and skill.”
Scott Nash, the chief executive of MOM’S Organic Market grocery chain and the owner of VUK, a Washington, D.C., pinball and pizza parlour, calls pinball “the perfect combinatio­n of luck and skill.”

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