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Pin2K

Pinball 2000 Reborn: A Stunning Revenge From Mars Pinball Conversion By COOLTOY

October 23, 2025 By ausretrogamer

COOLTOY’s Pinball 2000 Transplant Triumph

What happens when retro sci-fi meets modern pinball craftsmanship? You get a one-of-a-kind Revenge From Mars machine that’s turning heads and flipping expectations, literally.

Content creator and pinball enthusiast COOLTOY has pulled off a jaw-dropping transplant: taking the iconic Pinball 2000 system from its original cabinet and giving it a sleek new home in a modern-style pinball cabinet. The result? A machine that feels like a time-traveling hybrid – equal parts 1999 innovation and 2025 flair.

🚀 A Quick Blast from the Past

Originally released in 1999 by Williams Electronics Games under the Bally label, Revenge From Mars was the first machine to use the Pinball 2000 system. Designed by George Gomez, it fused traditional pinball mechanics with interactive video overlays projected onto the playfield – a revolutionary concept at the time. It was also the spiritual sequel to the beloved Attack From Mars, and followed by Star Wars Episode I.

But while the gameplay was ahead of its time, the cabinet design was very much of its era. That’s where COOLTOY stepped in.

🔧 The Transplant Operation

COOLTOY’s project involved transplanting the guts of Revenge From Mars into a traditional-style cabinet sourced from the talented folks at Barrels of Fun Pinball. This wasn’t just a shell swap, it was a full-on reimagining.

  • Custom artwork by the legendary Brian Allen of Flyland Designs gives the machine a bold, comic-book aesthetic that pops.
  • A custom topper from The Electric Playground (TEP) and Brad Albright adds flair and personality.
  • The result is a machine that looks like it rolled straight out of a Martian arcade in the year 3000.

🎥 See It in Action

COOLTOY walks us through the entire build in his YouTube video, showcasing the cabinet, artwork, and gameplay in glorious detail. Check it out below:


source: COOLTOY

🕹️ Why It Matters

This project is more than just a cool mod, it’s a celebration of pinball history and creativity. It shows how retro tech can be preserved, enhanced, and reimagined for new generations of players. For fans of Revenge From Mars, it’s a fresh way to experience a classic. For modders and collectors, it’s inspiration to think outside the cabinet.

 

Filed Under: Pinball, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Alien, Barrels of Fun, Brad Albright, Brian Allen Flyland Designs, Cooltoy, Cooltoy's Revenge From Mars, Modder, Pin2K, pinball, Pinball 2000, pinball machine, pinball mod, Pinball2000, Revenge From Mars, RFM, Topper

Pinball 2000: Party Like It’s 1999

November 29, 2019 By ausretrogamer

There is no doubt that pinball is currently going through a great resurgence and is the ‘in’ thing right now, but the silverball game was struggling to stay relevant in the 21stcentury and was subsequently killed off in October 1999 before it could showcase the future of pinball with the Pinball 2000 platform. Wow, that was 20 years ago!

To observe the anniversary of pinball’s downfall, let’s turn the clock back two decades. It was the last year of the nineties and the last for the 20th century, so just like Prince sang many moons ago, “I’m gonna party like it’s nineteen ninety-nine”! Ah 1999, we were all panicking about the inevitable doom that the Y2K bug was going to befall on all of us, but at least the year started well for pinball.

The story goes back a few years to 1997, the then President and CEO of Williams (WMS), Neil Nicastro, challenged the pinball division to come up with something new or risk being closed down. Williams’ designers worked hard throughout 1998 to come up with something innovative, a brand new kind of pinball machine, which became Pinball 2000. Pinball 2000 (P2K) fused video with classic pinball gameplay, almost like an early augmented reality (AR), it aimed to preserve what was great about pinball yet opening up new possibilities for a product that was on its last legs.

One of the most successful pinball designers of the decade, George Gomez and Pat Lawlor had shown their new modular creation and future of pinball, with the official unveiling of the Pinball 2000 architecture and the first game on the platform, Revenge From Mars, in January 1999. Even though Pinball 2000 was a success with Revenge From Mars selling 6800+ units, Williams’ President did not see that his pinball division had innovated enough to reinvigorate pinball. Once the last Pinball 2000 machine, John Popadiuk’s Star Wars: Episode 1, was released, Neil Dicastro and his executive team dropped a bombshell by jettisoning pinball in favour of gaming (gambling) slot machines, which was very lucrative for Williams. This meant that the next two Pinball 2000 machines, Wizard Blocks and Playboy, would never see the light of day – which is a darn shame. Closing down the Williams pinball division seemed like, at the time, the death of pinball.

As history would have it, the story of Pinball 2000 came to be, and its inevitable death, at the hands of Williams’ executives, but there was one company that survived and kept the pinball light flickering, Stern Pinball. A lot has transpired in pinball since 1999, with a new golden age that is currently in full swing, so the rest, as they say, is history. Long live PINBALL!

PS: There is a great in-depth documentary on Pinball 2000, TILT: The Battle To Save Pinball, which you can watch on Amazon Prime right now!

 

image sources: pinball2000.de & The Arcade Flyer Archive

 

If you appreciate what we do, please feel free to show your appreciation via the ausretrogamer virtual tip jar. Thank you 🙂

 

Filed Under: History, Pinball, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Bally Pinball, Bally Williams, Cameron Silver, Death of pinball, Death of pinball in 1999, Duncan Brown, George Gomez, Greg Freres, Greg Maletic, History, Holopin, John Popadiuk, John Youssi, Pat Lawlor, Pin2K, pinball, Pinball 2000, Pinball Expo, Pinball History, Pinball Press, pinballpress, Revenge From Mars, Star Wars Episode I, Stern Pinball, tilt, Tilt Film, TILT: The Battle to Save Pinball, WEG, Willaims Bally, Williams Electronic Games, Williams Pinball, Wizard Blocks, WMS

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