Extreme Pinball is a pinball video game developed by Digital Extremes and Epic Megagames, and published by Electronic Arts for MS-DOS computers and the Sony PlayStation. It was the first game by Digital Extremes, though founder James Schmalz had previously created Silverball and Epic Pinball.
The game has the following tables:
- "Rock Fantasy"
- "Medieval Knights"
- "Urban Chaos"
- "Monkey Mayhem"
Compared to Epic Megagames' earlier pinball titles, Extreme Pinball featured higher-resolution graphics and taller playfields. Unfortunately, the game failed to catch on; players found the tables sparse and dull, multiball locks the camera at the bottom of the playfield, and the dot-matrix display took up a fair amount of screen space, making the scrolling view claustrophobic as a result. Worse, the table view lagged slightly behind the ball, making it easy to lose track of the game, and the floaty physics prevents catching or trapping it.
The PlayStation version was released via Play Station Network in 2010.
Extreme Pinball contains examples of:
- Dystopia: The city of "Urban Chaos", complete with wrecked cars and a Chalk Outline in the streets..
- Maniac Monkeys: The premise of "Monkey Mayhem".
- Spiritual Successor: To Epic Pinball
- Sword Fight: Shown prominently on the playfield of "Medieval Knights", and used as the table's Video Mode.
- There Are No Good Executives: A mild case appears in "Rock Fantasy", which shows a smiling Record Company executive chomping a cigar and holding out two handfuls of cash."No Deal."
- Unwilling Suspension: The hero in "Monkey Mayhem" is hanging by a rope around his wrists over a pit of monkeys.
- Video Mode: "Medieval Knights" features a sword fight between two knights.