Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Main / LimitedSpecialCollectorsUltimateEdition

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Pinball.The Beatles has been moved to Pinball.The Beatles Beatlemania, so I'm updating the wicks to match.


* ''Pinball/TheBeatles'' is unusual among Stern games in TheNewTens in that its three versions have no gameplay-related differences, just different artwork and cabinet armor. There's the "Gold" version (limited to 1,614 units), the "Platinum" version (limited to 250 units), and the "Diamond" edition (limited to 100 units and sporting a mirrored backglass).

to:

* ''Pinball/TheBeatles'' ''Pinball/TheBeatlesBeatlemania'' is unusual among Stern games in TheNewTens in that its three versions have no gameplay-related differences, just different artwork and cabinet armor. There's the "Gold" version (limited to 1,614 units), the "Platinum" version (limited to 250 units), and the "Diamond" edition (limited to 100 units and sporting a mirrored backglass).
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Very common on Website/{{Kickstarter}} projects. For the unfamiliar, it's a site that crowdsources venture capital for various projects - in other words, anyone can donate to a project they'd like to see happen. You can pledge a token amount of money just to have contributed, while certain minimum pledges are effectively a pre-order for the product to be developed (provided the project is for a product, anyway). Higher pledge tiers work out like various levels of limited edition for the project in question, so while you might pledge $20 to get, say, a digital copy of a video game to be made once funded, you could drop $50 for a physical copy of the game with some extra feelies like buttons or decals. Or $100 for the physical copy in a very nice case with buttons, decals, and limited game art. Or... well, you get the picture. High-tier pledges (usually hundreds if not thousands of dollars) are often very limited in quantity, and have infamously included things like "the game designer for a tabletop RPG comes to your home, cooks dinner, and runs the game for you and your friends."

to:

* Very common on Website/{{Kickstarter}} UsefulNotes/{{Kickstarter}} projects. For the unfamiliar, it's a site that crowdsources venture capital for various projects - in other words, anyone can donate to a project they'd like to see happen. You can pledge a token amount of money just to have contributed, while certain minimum pledges are effectively a pre-order for the product to be developed (provided the project is for a product, anyway). Higher pledge tiers work out like various levels of limited edition for the project in question, so while you might pledge $20 to get, say, a digital copy of a video game to be made once funded, you could drop $50 for a physical copy of the game with some extra feelies like buttons or decals. Or $100 for the physical copy in a very nice case with buttons, decals, and limited game art. Or... well, you get the picture. High-tier pledges (usually hundreds if not thousands of dollars) are often very limited in quantity, and have infamously included things like "the game designer for a tabletop RPG comes to your home, cooks dinner, and runs the game for you and your friends."

Top