Heat Wave

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Average fun score:
90
Total ratings:
1

Heat Wave Game Info

Heat Wave is a pinball machine manufactured by Williams Electronic Games Inc. in 1964. Concept by Steve Kordek. Design by Steve Kordek. Mechanics by Steve Kordek. Art by Steve Kordek. Animation by Steve Kordek.
Primary manufacturer:
Williams Electronic Games Inc.
Year:
1964
Preferred Dealer:
Flip N Out Pinball
IPDB
OPDB Group ID:
5vDW
Remake manufacturer:
Other manufacturer:
Game type:
Electro-Mechanical
Display type:
Reels
Players:
1
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Heat Wave Photos

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Flyers & Promo Media

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Heat Wave Design Team

Concept:
Steve Kordek
Design:
Code:
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Mechanics/Electronics:
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Sound:
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Music:
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Callouts:
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Heat Wave Rules

Quickie Version:

UTAD if the flippers are strong. If the flippers are weak, shoot the A and B targets until the center target value is 400 or 500, shoot the target, then shoot A and B again to reset the target and repeat.

Go-to Flipper:

Balanced

Risk Index:

Very High

Full Rules:

There are only two sources of good points on this machine: the top bumper, worth 100 when lit, and the center drop target. The value of the drop target starts at 100 and is raised up to 500 in 100-point increments via nine items: the five rollover buttons at the top, when lit; the two rollover buttons just above the flippers, when lit; and the two swinging targets, labelled A and B, with rebound rubber behind them. Everything else is worth just 1 unlit or 10 lit. If you advance the target value all the way to the top, it changes the value to Special. You don’t want to do that if you’re not awarded points for a special, since otherwise, you get zero for the target from then on, making the otherwise most valuable shot in the game now worthless. The outlanes score the center target value, so it’s important to try to avoid center drains; way easier said than done on this machine. The flipper positions relative to the center drain area are not what you’re used to: a wide space between the flippers with an up-facing triangular wedge between them. Balls that hit the sides of the wedge will bounce towards the flippers, but it’s a real challenge to learn when to flip at those bounces right away vs. not flip and try to cradle the ball. If the ball bounces too hard towards the flipper and you don’t flip, it may continue up into the slingshot and get kicked away. If you have a chance to practice on the game, test this out.

via Bob's Guide

How to Play Heat Wave

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Heat Wave Gameplay Video

Gameplay Discussion & History

Mods and Toppers

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