Results for the Main Tournament event on September 22, 2019
Pos | Player | Rank | Rating | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Andrei Massenkoff | 29 | 1844.62 | 8.28 |
2 | Leslie Ruckman | 456 | 1600.03 | 3.86 |
3 | Jon Olkowski | 2615 | 1524.16 | 2.23 |
4 | Ben Chen | 13468 | 1380.25 | 1.39 |
5 | John Briggs | 8821 | 1764.73 | 0.93 |
6 | Dexter Dong | 6807 | 1327.28 | 0.71 |
7 | Jose Godinez | 2760 | 1326.91 | 0.61 |
8 | Zac Wollons | 63 | 1672.27 | 0.56 |
9 | Ryan Odonnell CA | 189 | 1582.96 | 0.53 |
11 | Peter Soriano | 4517 | 1420.83 | 0.45 |
11 | Eric Garcia | 6509 | 1284.23 | 0.45 |
11 | Paul Skuta | 22737 | 1285.73 | 0.45 |
11 | Matthew Talley | 1404 | 1500.90 | 0.45 |
15 | Maurice Sharpe | 35620 | Not Rated | 0.30 |
15 | Patrick Coleman | 35620 | 1012.33 | 0.30 |
15 | Michelle Morris | 35620 | 1272.62 | 0.30 |
15 | Chris Constantino | 9135 | 1338.03 | 0.30 |
18 | Amanda Futrell | 35620 | 1210.82 | 0.19 |
19 | Peter Cantin | 22194 | 1080.40 | 0.15 |
20 | Calliope Constantino | 15236 | 1094.87 | 0.11 |
20 | Abigail Garcia | 35620 | Not Rated | 0.11 |
22 | William Garcia | 35620 | Not Rated | 0.04 |
Location
Format Details
Event Name : | Main Tournament |
Qualifying Format : | |
Finals Format : | Unknown |
Player Limit : | Unknown |
Unlimited Qualifying? : | No |
Tournament Overview
Tournament Date: September 22, 2019
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Hey folks! To kick off Season 8 of the Pacific Pinball League we're hosting a tournament using a new format called Time Attack! 10 rounds of high speed pinball action. Two fun side challenges, and A and B Finals.
Where: The Pacific Pinball Museum, 1510 Webster Street, Alameda, CA
When: Sunday Sept. 22, 4PM - 9PM. Registration, Games posted, and side challenges start around 2PM.
Entry: $20 and all games on Free Play. Entry includes Museum and Tournament entry.
Format: Time Attack Qualifying. Top 8 play in "A" Finals. The next 16 novice and intermediate players play in the B Division Finals.
Prizes: $9 of each entry goes to the prize pool. 40%-30-20-10 for top 4. B Division: T shirts and $20 Gift Certificates.
How it works:
Compete head-to-head in 10 time-limited rounds of 2 minutes each on games of all eras (from the late-1960s to Modern games) using Swiss Pairs with balanced game selection and play-order choice. Extra balls and game restarts are allowed. Whatever is on the scoreboard after 2 minutes is the determining score.
Final rounds for "A" Division are 4-Player groups on four games per round with 3-2-1-0 scoring and not time limited. The top 2 from each group advances to the next round.
Final rounds for "B" Division are 5 more rounds of Time Attack! followed by tie-breakers.
Who can enter: Open to all skill levels. The top 8 overall qualifiers will play in the "A" Finals. The next 16 players with an IFPA rank lower than 1000, or no rank at all, are eligible to play in the "B" Finals.
Rules and Frequently Asked Questions (this is a different format, please read this)
1. How is a typical round played?
Each round, the game, players and player order is determined by the tournament software. All player 1s will get ready to plunge on their assigned machines. Except where noted*, players may start the game but may not plunge until the match begins. The tournament judge will count down the group "5 - 4 - 3 - 2 - 1 - GO!" At the end of 2 minutes all players must go "Hands Off!" and let the current ball drain. Bonus (if any) is collected and that's the player's score. Scores are recorded (typically via the player's cell phone camera), then players switch positions and the above is repeated. The player with the higher score wins.
(*Some games will auto-launch a short time after the Start button is pressed, such as Doctor Who. The player will wait for the 'Go' command to press the Start button and begin play on those games)
Results are self-reported by the players (again, usually via their phones, but on my laptop is fine, too) and players in each match are responsible for verifying accuracy and reporting errors. Any errors not reported or resolved once the next round begins are permanent.
2. Games can be restarted? How does that work?
Yes! At any time you can restart your game, thus ending (voiding) your game in progress, and start a new game. By doing so, the original game is voided. Any progress or points from the voided game don't matter.
Why would you want to do that? The most common scenario is you're playing a tough game with no ball saver and you get two quick drains with lots of time still left. Restarting may be the better option versus hoping you can do well enough on your last remaining ball. Another common scenario is when playing on a game where a single tilt ends the whole game, such as El Dorado.
Note: Some games have odd restart quirks. For example, most electro-mechanical games will not restart (flippers will stay dead) until the ball in the shooter lane is plunged and back in the trough. It's the player's responsibility to know these quirks. Exceptions will not be made because "I didn't know that's how it works."
3. What happens if I get a stuck or lost ball?
Stuck Balls
If a player gets a stuck ball in a location where the ball search will definitely not free the ball by direct action (such as an air ball that lodges the ball behind a playfield feature), the player raises his/her hand, play stops and a compensation round is provided.
If a player gets a stuck ball that can be freed via a nudge or the playfield search:
1) Player has the choice of freeing it/allowing it to be freed and playing through (and accepting the risk of a tilt and loss of time), or
2) player can stop play, hold one flipper up (to prevent the ball search from activating which may free the ball via direct action or vibration) and raise their hand to signal as such. Once the hand is raised the current game in play is voided, and the player must cease any attempts to free the ball so that the tournament director can verify it. Once verified, a compensation round is provided.
Every attempt will be made to verify a stuck ball but if vibration, accidental player action (leaning on the machine, bumping it, etc) or bad luck causes the ball to free itself before it was verified, no compensation is provided and the score is valid. If time remains on the clock, the player may continue. (This is an extremely rare edge case and you have nine other rounds to counteract any bad luck such as this)
If the player raises their hand (voiding their game) and is observed to simultaneously continue to attempt to free the ball, and/or continues to play on in some fashion, the player is disqualified and loses the round.
No compensation is provided for stuck balls which take "a long time" to free, either due to multiple failed nudges or waiting for the ball search.
A player may attempt to free a ball, but realizing it can not be done, raise their hand to void the game.
Players may discontinue play and be provided a compensation round for stuck balls which occur during a multiball, but they are not required to do so, i.e. if a ball is stuck in a 2 ball multiball, the player may continue play with a single ball. Since the round is 2 minutes long, the advantage of a stuck ball in this scenario is minimal.
If a player chooses to continue play with a stuck ball but does not attempt to free it (i.e. "ride out the round"), the "current score in play" is recorded, not the post-bonus collect score. Example: Player A scores 150k on 8 Ball Deluxe. Player B scores 130k and the ball becomes stuck. Player B realizes that he has 50k in bonus, and simply draining will allow them to pass Player A. If Player B does not free the ball nor signal the decision to void, the final score for Player B is 130k and Player B would lose the match. Put another way, you cannot ride out the clock and then have a tournament official free your ball so that you can collect your bonus and win the match.
4. What happens in the case of Lost Balls or Double Feeds?
If a game loses track of the ball in play or erroneously provides a compensation ball, double-feeds a ball, or similar, the game is voided and a compensation round is provided.
5. How will the games be set up?
Overall, consider games to have a "location" setup, condition and medium tilt. Tournament mode will be enabled to balance random awards such as Mystery awards where possible. However, if, for example, the castle gate on Medieval Madness fails to occasionally register hits and the condition is the same for all players, then it will not be grounds for a Malfunction.
Side Challenges
Two fun side challenges such as "One-hand, One Ball" that you can play during any downtime or breaks. Mini-Finals for these side challenges will include the top 4 on each game and be played between qualifying and Finals. The winner gets a T shirt.
Hey folks! To kick off Season 8 of the Pacific Pinball League we're hosting a tournament using a new format called Time Attack! 10 rounds of high speed pinball action. Two fun side challenges, and A and B Finals.
Where: The Pacific Pinball Museum, 1510 Webster Street, Alameda, CA
When: Sunday Sept. 22, 4PM - 9PM. Registration, Games posted, and side challenges start around 2PM.
Entry: $20 and all games on Free Play. Entry includes Museum and Tournament entry.
Format: Time Attack Qualifying. Top 8 play in "A" Finals. The next 16 novice and intermediate players play in the B Division Finals.
Prizes: $9 of each entry goes to the prize pool. 40%-30-20-10 for top 4. B Division: T shirts and $20 Gift Certificates.
How it works:
Compete head-to-head in 10 time-limited rounds of 2 minutes each on games of all eras (from the late-1960s to Modern games) using Swiss Pairs with balanced game selection and play-order choice. Extra balls and game restarts are allowed. Whatever is on the scoreboard after 2 minutes is the determining score.
Final rounds for "A" Division are 4-Player groups on four games per round with 3-2-1-0 scoring and not time limited. The top 2 from each group advances to the next round.
Final rounds for "B" Division are 5 more rounds of Time Attack! followed by tie-breakers.
Who can enter: Open to all skill levels. The top 8 overall qualifiers will play in the "A" Finals. The next 16 players with an IFPA rank lower than 1000, or no rank at all, are eligible to play in the "B" Finals.
Rules and Frequently Asked Questions (this is a different format, please read this)
1. How is a typical round played?
Each round, the game, players and player order is determined by the tournament software. All player 1s will get ready to plunge on their assigned machines. Except where noted*, players may start the game but may not plunge until the match begins. The tournament judge will count down the group "5 - 4 - 3 - 2 - 1 - GO!" At the end of 2 minutes all players must go "Hands Off!" and let the current ball drain. Bonus (if any) is collected and that's the player's score. Scores are recorded (typically via the player's cell phone camera), then players switch positions and the above is repeated. The player with the higher score wins.
(*Some games will auto-launch a short time after the Start button is pressed, such as Doctor Who. The player will wait for the 'Go' command to press the Start button and begin play on those games)
Results are self-reported by the players (again, usually via their phones, but on my laptop is fine, too) and players in each match are responsible for verifying accuracy and reporting errors. Any errors not reported or resolved once the next round begins are permanent.
2. Games can be restarted? How does that work?
Yes! At any time you can restart your game, thus ending (voiding) your game in progress, and start a new game. By doing so, the original game is voided. Any progress or points from the voided game don't matter.
Why would you want to do that? The most common scenario is you're playing a tough game with no ball saver and you get two quick drains with lots of time still left. Restarting may be the better option versus hoping you can do well enough on your last remaining ball. Another common scenario is when playing on a game where a single tilt ends the whole game, such as El Dorado.
Note: Some games have odd restart quirks. For example, most electro-mechanical games will not restart (flippers will stay dead) until the ball in the shooter lane is plunged and back in the trough. It's the player's responsibility to know these quirks. Exceptions will not be made because "I didn't know that's how it works."
3. What happens if I get a stuck or lost ball?
Stuck Balls
If a player gets a stuck ball in a location where the ball search will definitely not free the ball by direct action (such as an air ball that lodges the ball behind a playfield feature), the player raises his/her hand, play stops and a compensation round is provided.
If a player gets a stuck ball that can be freed via a nudge or the playfield search:
1) Player has the choice of freeing it/allowing it to be freed and playing through (and accepting the risk of a tilt and loss of time), or
2) player can stop play, hold one flipper up (to prevent the ball search from activating which may free the ball via direct action or vibration) and raise their hand to signal as such. Once the hand is raised the current game in play is voided, and the player must cease any attempts to free the ball so that the tournament director can verify it. Once verified, a compensation round is provided.
Every attempt will be made to verify a stuck ball but if vibration, accidental player action (leaning on the machine, bumping it, etc) or bad luck causes the ball to free itself before it was verified, no compensation is provided and the score is valid. If time remains on the clock, the player may continue. (This is an extremely rare edge case and you have nine other rounds to counteract any bad luck such as this)
If the player raises their hand (voiding their game) and is observed to simultaneously continue to attempt to free the ball, and/or continues to play on in some fashion, the player is disqualified and loses the round.
No compensation is provided for stuck balls which take "a long time" to free, either due to multiple failed nudges or waiting for the ball search.
A player may attempt to free a ball, but realizing it can not be done, raise their hand to void the game.
Players may discontinue play and be provided a compensation round for stuck balls which occur during a multiball, but they are not required to do so, i.e. if a ball is stuck in a 2 ball multiball, the player may continue play with a single ball. Since the round is 2 minutes long, the advantage of a stuck ball in this scenario is minimal.
If a player chooses to continue play with a stuck ball but does not attempt to free it (i.e. "ride out the round"), the "current score in play" is recorded, not the post-bonus collect score. Example: Player A scores 150k on 8 Ball Deluxe. Player B scores 130k and the ball becomes stuck. Player B realizes that he has 50k in bonus, and simply draining will allow them to pass Player A. If Player B does not free the ball nor signal the decision to void, the final score for Player B is 130k and Player B would lose the match. Put another way, you cannot ride out the clock and then have a tournament official free your ball so that you can collect your bonus and win the match.
4. What happens in the case of Lost Balls or Double Feeds?
If a game loses track of the ball in play or erroneously provides a compensation ball, double-feeds a ball, or similar, the game is voided and a compensation round is provided.
5. How will the games be set up?
Overall, consider games to have a "location" setup, condition and medium tilt. Tournament mode will be enabled to balance random awards such as Mystery awards where possible. However, if, for example, the castle gate on Medieval Madness fails to occasionally register hits and the condition is the same for all players, then it will not be grounds for a Malfunction.
Side Challenges
Two fun side challenges such as "One-hand, One Ball" that you can play during any downtime or breaks. Mini-Finals for these side challenges will include the top 4 on each game and be played between qualifying and Finals. The winner gets a T shirt.