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Context Creator / RogerSharpe

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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/roger-sharpe-pinball-demo_4320.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Sharpe and the SkillShot that saved pinball.]]
3While other PinballCreators are recognized for their participation in making {{Pinball}} games, Roger C. Sharpe (born sometime in the late '40s) is universally recognized as the most important '''player''' ever in the hobby.
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5In 1976, Sharpe was working as a writer and editor for publications such as ''GQ'' and ''The New York Times'' when he was called to appear in a courtoom in Manhattan. The Music & Amusement Association was attempting to overturn New York City's [[NewMediaAreEvil thirty-four-year ban on pinball machines,]][[note]]The city treated them no different than slot machines and other gambling devices[[/note]] and Sharpe -- one of the nation's top players at the time -- was their star witness. Under scrutiny by the city council and local media, he eloquently argued that the ban should be overturned on the grounds that pinball was not a game of chance, but required patience, reflexes, and skill.
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7Sharpe began to prove his assertion by playing a demonstration game on a table[[note]]''Pinball/ElDorado'' by Creator/{{Gottlieb}}[[/note]] provided by the MAA. The Chairman, suspicious of tampering by "the pinballers", demanded that he use a backup machine[[note]]''Bank Shot'', also by Creator/{{Gottlieb}}[[/note]] instead. Although he had never played it before, Sharpe proceeded to do so, pointing out the strategies a player would need to maximize the score, while showing off his ball control and aiming skills. However, despite this demonstration, the council remained skeptical.
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9In a desperate move, Sharpe allowed the current ball to drain, then [[BadassBoast declared that he would]] ''[[BadassBoast prove]]'' [[BadassBoast pinball was a game of skill]] by [[CallingYourShots launching his next ball through the lit center lane]][[note]]out of five available[[/note]] at the top of the playfield. He then [[SkillShot gently launched the ball,]] which [[ImprobableAimingSkills flew straight into the lane he called.]] The Chairman immediately declared that he had seen enough; New York City's ban was quickly lifted, prompting other municipalities to drop their bans as well.
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11Sharpe's involvement with pinball did not end there. In 1977 he wrote ''Pinball!'', an illustrated history of the game that is still considered the Bible of the field. He went on to design several pinball machines for Game Plan, Creator/{{Stern}}, and Creator/WilliamsElectronics, and later became head of marketing at Williams. In the late Seventies, Sharpe, Steve Epstein, and Lionel Martinez started the [[http://papa.org/ Professional Amateur Pinball Association]] to rank players and their best scores.
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13Sharpe served as the Licensing Manager for WMS Gaming through 2014, when he left to become the chief executive of Sharpe Communications, a creative services company based in Chicago. He remains active in the arcade industry as a hobbyist, collector, and speaker, and consults for pinball companies on licensing issues.
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15The 2022 comedy film ''Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game'' is based on Roger Sharpe.
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17----
18!! Pinball games designed by Roger Sharpe include:
19[[index]]
20* ''Stingray'' (Stern, 1977)
21* ''Sharpshooter'' (Game Plan, 1979)
22* ''Old Coney Island'' (Game Plan, 1979)
23* ''Pinball/{{Barracora}}'' (Williams, 1981)
24* ''Sharpshooter II'' (Game Plan, 1981)
25* ''Cyclopes'' (Game Plan, 1985)
26[[/index]]
27----
28!!Roger Sharpe's life and works demonstrate the following tropes:
29* PromotedFanboy
30* SignatureStyle: Sharpe's three rules of a good pinball table design:
31** The game should give the player a good idea of what is going on, or what they should be doing.
32** The ball should be visible at all times while on the playfield. If the ball leaves the playfield, the player should know where and when it will reappear.
33** The player must have a good chance of making each shot.

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