Who Dunnit | |
Manufacturer: | Midway |
Model: | 50044 |
System: | Midway WPC-Security |
Designer: | Dwight Sullivan, Barry Oursler |
Programmer: | Dwight Sullivan |
Artwork: | Linda Deal, Paul Barker |
Mechanics: | Zofia Bil |
Music: | Paul Heitsch |
Voices: | Tim Kitzrow (Nick Spade) Paul Heitsch (Bruno) Gingi Lahera (Trixie) Vince Pontarelli (Tony) Rachel Davies (Victoria) Ed Boon (Butler) |
Sound: | Paul Heitsch |
Release: | 1995 |
Production: | 2,416 units |
Who Dunnit is a Midway pinball machine with a 1940s style and a murder mystery theme. The playfield features up to five different murder mysteries in which the player must find clues and evidence by making indicated shots. The machine accepts up to four players, and features four-ball play.[1]
An interpretation of "Peter Gunn" is used as the primary background music, with portions of "Theme from A Summer Place" playing during certain modes.
The aim of the game is to solve five murder mysteries by interrogating suspects and finding evidence before heading to the Roof in the game to catch the killer. There can be a maximum of four balls in play at any time, and it can support up to four players.
The player may purchase an extra ball at the end of a game, either by using a credit already on the machine or by inserting coins. Bonus credits are awarded for achieving the highest score (Grand Champion) or any of the next four best scores.[2] Players can also enter their initials as Loop Champion or Roof Champion for achieving the most consecutive right ramp shots or the highest score for the Roof, respectively.
If the machine's internal clock reaches 12:00 am while a game is in progress, it is interrupted for "Midnight Madness," a 4-ball multiball with an extended ball saver in which all targets award 3 million. Normal play resumes after all but one ball has drained.
The five characters involved in the cases are Tony, Victoria, Trixie, Butler (previously known as Walter), and Bruno (previously known as Tex). Each case begins with a headline announcing that one character has been murdered; the player's goal is to choose the killer from the remaining four.
The player can gain information by making shots to interrogate one suspect at a time or collect evidence, then making an indicated shot (usually the phone) to choose the killer. An incorrect choice awards points for eliminating an innocent suspect, while a correct choice sends the player to the roof in an attempt to apprehend the killer and close the case (see "The Roof" below).
A suspect being interrogated will always mention the killer by name unless he/she actually is the killer.
The player can collect up to five clues per case; doing so lights up an extra ball. The clues do not provide any information as to the killer's identity, and each new case erases any previously collected clues.
Four pieces of equipment can be earned by making specified shots. Each one remains in effect until the end of the game and affects play as follows.
Three slot machine reels displaying various items and rewards are set into the center of the playfield. Whenever a flashing "SPIN" shot is made (phone, roulette lane, sewer) or a lit outlane is hit, these reels spin and come to a stop, with the result of the spin shown on the display as well. The player scores points and/or receives items based on the following combinations:
Shooting the left orbit when it is not lit for a Taxi Chase diverts the ball into the jet bumpers, each of which corresponds to a different reel. Hits to the bumpers nudge the reels; once two or more reels match, the bumpers no longer affect them. After the ball falls into the sinkhole underneath the bumpers, the player receives points or items for the three displayed symbols as listed above.
If the player earns a second chance from a spin triggered by draining the ball down a lit outlane, another ball is automatically put into play.
Shooting in the far right lane raises/lowers the roulette bet with every turn of the spinner, and the color of the bet is changed between red and black by hitting two stand-up targets. When the lane is lit and the player shoots the ball into a saucer at its end, the game offers the option to bet or pass. If the player takes the bet, a simulated roulette wheel is spun; the bet is added to the player's score if it stops on the last color hit, or deducted if it does not. The bonus multiplier is increased whether the player wins, loses, or passes.
The player can shoot any of the three short center ramps to ride an elevator up or down within Tony's Palace or exit at the current floor. Awards for the individual floors are as follows.
Unlike clues, evidence items do provide information that can be used to narrow the pool of suspects (e.g. a set of cufflinks, suggesting that the killer is a man).
After a floor is visited, a bank of three stand-up targets rises to block the ramps; all three must be hit to lower them and access the elevator again. Shots to the Up or Down ramps skip any previously visited floors. Once every floor has been visited, all of them become available.
This mode can be started in three different ways:
Three balls are put into play, and the sewer, roulette lane, and Mystery target all award jackpots when hit. A jackpot is also awarded once all three elevator ramps (Up, Down, Exit) have been shot; the three stand-ups then rise to block the ramps and must all be hit to lower them.
The jackpot starts at 75 million and increases by 1 million for each jet bumper hit during this multiball, or 5 million per hit if the player has the Revolver. It carries over from one multiball to the next, and stops rising after the first jet bumper hit that brings it to 500 million or higher.
This phase of the game involves the player's attempt to catch the killer. It can be started in any of the following ways:
The player must first shoot the lit Taxi Chase loop within a limited time, starting a hurry-up countdown, then shoot the phone before it times out. Doing so scores the points, closes the case, and starts a four-ball multiball with all major shots lit to collect the hurry-up value. If the player fails to shoot the phone before the countdown times out, another Taxi Chase must be hit to restart it. Once the player either loses the ball, runs out of time during the Taxi Chase phase, or drains all but one ball during the multiball, a new case begins with all clues unlit.
Digital version of this table is no longer available in The Pinball Arcade for any platform. WMS license expired on June 30, 2018.
Unlicensed versions have also been created for Visual Pinball.