A guy is building a real-life Space Cadet pinball machine, and it's glorious
While most of us are busy forgetting the digital ghosts of Windows XP, one madman is dragging Space Cadet into the physical realm. This isn't just another nostalgic fever dream—it is a full-blown engineering obsession that defies common sense.
A YouTuber known as CNCDan is currently resurrecting Space Cadet, the iconic pinball game that defined the "I have no internet" childhood experience. While Maxis originally packaged this as part of their Full Tilt! Pinball series back in the 90s, the digital version remained trapped in CRT monitors. Previous attempts to build a physical version ended in spectacular failure, including a doomed project by Deeproot Pinball that went bankrupt after some rather spicy legal drama.
The build features 3D-printed flippers and custom LED-lit bumpers, all scaled down to fit a custom one-meter table. Because the original game was designed for a 2D screen, the geometry is a nightmare; the creator had to squeeze everything into a playing field just 56 centimeters wide. This forced some surgical-level cable management just to ensure the ball doesn't get stuck in a logic trap, while a mechanical delay was added to mimic that specific, weird pause when the ball hits the gravity well.
The project is currently hitting the artistic stage, with the creator actively avoiding AI-generated art to keep the aesthetic authentic to the original 2001 release. It turns out that recreating a virtual artifact in reality requires more than just pixels—it requires a stubborn refusal to let a simple time-waster die.
Watching someone pour thousands of hours into a game that everyone played exclusively because they were bored at work is the ultimate testament to human irrationality. It is either a brilliant preservation of internet history or a cry for help that the world clearly decided was worth funding.
Source: CNCDan
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