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Australian Pinball Expo

Australian Pinball Expo Set for July 2026!

July 25, 2025 By ausretrogamer

🎉 Australia Are You Ready For Some Silverball Action 🎉

If you love pinball as much as we do, then get ready—Australia’s silverball scene is about to get even bigger!

Introducing the inaugural Australian Pinball Expo (A.P.E), set to take place from Thursday, 2nd July to Sunday, 5th July 2026 in Adelaide, South Australia.

Organised by the passionate crew behind the Australian Pinball Museum, A.P.E. aims to bring together flipper fanatics from across the country to celebrate the sights, sounds, and history of pinball—from classic electromechanicals to modern marvels.

Whether you’re a seasoned player, a collector, or just looking to soak up the nostalgia, the Australian Pinball Expo promises to be an unmissable event packed with games, guests, and good times.

The all important details (that we know so far):

  • 🎰What: Australian Pinball Expo
  • 📆 When: July 2–5, 2026
  • 📍 Location: Morphettville Racecourse Function Centre, 79 Morphett Road, Morphettville, SA
  • 🎟️ Tickets: TBC

We’re already counting down the days and planning our trip—are you? Adelaide will be the place to be for Aussie pinheads next winter!

Stay tuned for more updates as details emerge—we’ll be covering all the highlights right here on Ausretrogamer!

PS: For those wanting to get involved with this huge pinball event, go and complete the expression of interest form.

source: Morphetville

image: All silverballs lead to Adelaide!

Filed Under: Announcements, Pinball Tagged With: adelaide pinball event, APE, Arcade Expo, ausretrogamer, Australian Pinball Expo, Australian Pinball Expo 2026, Australian Pinball Museum, pinball, Pinball Australia, pinball collectors, pinball expo 2026, pinball machines, Retro Gaming

Australian Pinball Expo Extravaganza

November 17, 2014 By ausretrogamer

PinballExpo_1When I first heard about the Australian Pinball Expo, I was first in line to buy tickets. $55.00 for 2 days of pinball was a dream, until I went to PAX Aus 2014 in Melbourne. All of a sudden I didn’t care about this pinball shindig. I had my classic gaming fill and I’m pretty sure I could better spend my time at home doing the laundry (I whack my clothes against big rocks, so it takes me a while). Alas, those sneaky organisers make it impossible to get a refund so I was stuck (*sigh*).

It’s now Saturday 15th November 2014 and the overcast sky perfectly reflects my feelings towards what’s to come. Getting up at the crack of dawn is not my idea of fun, but I paid my $55 darnit and I was going to be there from opening to closing. I hop into the car, blast some Color Me Badd (as one does when going to a pinball expo) and off I go on a long drive to Penrith Panthers. I arrive at 9:10am and immediately regret staying behind that family van for so long. YOU MADE ME 10 MINUTES LATE AND THAT MEANS $0.57 WASTED!

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PinballExpo_7As I step out of the car, I immediately wish I’d stayed home. Who the heck is going to show up to this thing? 4 people total? It’s all about those Sony Playtendo whozits now. Nobody wants to play pinball anymore. I ask the reception lady about the pinball expo and am told it’s “outside, to the left in a big tent”. Pffft, tent? I’ve come this far so I’ll begin my perilous journey to that tent. As it comes into view, my regret quickly turns to not-so-regret. “That’s a pretty big tent” I think to myself, immediately followed by “Hey! Is that Aqua Golf?! Holy crap. I should go do that!”. I approach the tent, take obligatory photos (my sincerest apologies for the quality – my phone is as old as the bands that I listen to), and make my way in. I slam my order confirmation down on the counter and demand my Ultimate Warrior neon bracelets. If I’m going to play some pinball, I have to look the part, and what better way than with neon colours adorning my wrists. I step inside and am frankly, amazed. That’s a lot of pinball and look, there’s already dozens of people here. Colour me impressed (or badd, that works too).

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PinballExpo_T2My first order of business was to locate the Terminator 2 machine. Oh, it’s right there. That was easy. I should take some photos and video. Clickity click, walkety walk. That was fun. Let’s play some T2. Wait, what’s that next to T2? Is that… it is… a Street Fighter II machine! My all time favourite pinball machine mere feet away from my all time favourite video game. Hold on, that’s not a Street Fighter II machine. That’s a cabinet running an emulator that just happens to be running Street Fighter II. Screw it, don’t care, I’m playing. Guile Guile Guile Guile. awww. I lost. I’ll come back and play later. That, in a nutshell, was my day. I would attempt to play Terminator 2 whenever it was available, follow it up with some Street Fighter, and fill in the gaps with the plethora of other machines available (Indiana Jones got a good playin’ too). 6 hours of standing was all that I could stand (pun obviously intended) so at 3:00pm, 2 hours before closing, I made my journey home. Even the cheapskate in me was too tired to play any longer. There’s always tomorrow.

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PinballExpo_12Is the cost of admission worth the time? Absolutely! With close to 200 machines ranging from 1940 all the way to the current digital machines, there really is something here for everyone. Everything is, as far as I can tell, arranged by period with the earlier machines at the far end of the tent and the latest and greatest closer to the entrance. The old simple machines had a charm to them that the newer machines cannot replicate. The pinging and minimalistic gameplay transported me back to the good old days when I’d go down to the local speakeasy, have a few, ogle some women and come home to my wife. Good times. With that said, it was the machines of the 70s, 80s and 90s that felt right to me while the entirely digital machines were just… wrong. No steel balls, no flippers, no pinging, no ponging. If I wanted to play a digital version of pinball, I’d head to Steam and buy Pinball FX2 or better yet, go retro and play some Pinball Dreams, Pinball Fantasies or Slam Tilt on the Amiga. Part of the appeal of pinball is the ding ding, bzzzzz, pooookh, bing, boof. You need that boof (Ed: tactile pleasure!).

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PinballExpo_16As one would expect, the machines from the 40s, 50s and 60s were seldom used while the newer machines had a constant queue of people waiting to get their chance to outdo one another. What I personally found most interesting is the range of people that had turned up. Male and female, old and young. Everyone was covered. The older folk (50+) stuck to the older machines while everyone else generally played with anything that wasn’t an older machine, with the exception of the kids that would play on anything that was free. The hipsters that showed up also primarily hung around the older machines, presumably because the pinging of old hardware isn’t mainstream, so it soothes them. I did what I could to play from every period, with the exception of the purely digital machines, because they’re the poo-poo faces of the pinball world and don’t deserve my time.

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PinballExpo14If you have the opportunity to attend an expo like this, I suggest you do it. If you have to, drag your family along. Everyone will have fun and if they don’t, divorce/break-up/disown/post drunk photos of them online! The Australian Pinball Expo was a thoroughly enjoyable event – make sure you go in 2015!

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

FrankieFrankie!
Not a baby but a phantom editor and an arcade & pinball wizard.

Follow Frankie! on Twitter

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Pinball, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Arcades, Australian Pinball Expo, event, pinball, Pinball Events, Pinball Expo, Retro Gamer, retrogaming

Australian Pinball Expo

October 25, 2014 By ausretrogamer

pinball_4Rolling on from the major video gaming events in October, November also gets in on the event action with the Australian Pinball Expo.

To be held at the Penrith Panthers, The Exhibition Marquee (NSW) from November 14 to 16, the Australian Pinball Expo will feature 180 pinball tables from the 1940s onward, exhibitors, classic arcade machines, lock-ins and your chance to play the new Wizard of Oz 75th anniversary pinball machine!

Make no mistake, this will be Australia’s largest pinball event. Tickets are $30 and will be available online soon or you can take the chance at getting some at the door.

For further details, hit the Australian Pinball Expo site!

pinball_2

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image source: Australian Pinball Expo

Filed Under: Announcements, Pinball Tagged With: Australian Pinball Expo, event, pinball, Pinball Events

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