Pokémon and pinball both taught a certain generation about progression: one through turn-based battles on a handheld, the other through flashing inserts and modes on a noisy table. Licensed pinball can feel lazy when it just slaps art on a generic layout. Stern’s Pokémon machine tries to do something harder, turning the actual structure of a Pokémon adventure into mechanical play instead of just plastering Pikachu on the backglass and calling it done.
Stern Pinball’s Pokémon pinball machine is a full-size, modern table built around a colorful playfield with ramps, targets, and toys, including a big Poké Ball, an animatronic Pikachu, and Team Rocket’s Meowth-shaped balloon. An LCD screen handles animations and story beats. The promise is simple: catch and train Pokémon, take on Gym Battles, and thwart Team Rocket with flippers and a silver ball instead of button presses.
Designer: Stern Pinball
Each game starts by dropping you into a random biome, forest, water, mountain, or desert. Shots in that zone correspond to discovering, catching, and training Pokémon partners, so hitting the right ramps feels like walking through tall grass or surfing a route, just with more noise and steel. Clearing tasks in a biome is how you move the story forward, not just how you chase a score.
Team Rocket shows up as trouble. Certain sequences trigger a Team Rocket encounter, where you protect Pokémon during a frantic multiball, keeping multiple balls in play while the table tries to steal your partners. Once you’ve done enough in a biome, you unlock a Gym Battle against a rival party, a more focused mode that feels like a boss fight mapped onto drop targets and ramps.
Clearing all the biomes’ Gym Battles opens the door to the Pokémon Arena, a final stage that pulls everything together. There’s even a path to face Giovanni, Team Rocket’s boss, reserved for players who can keep control long enough to see deep into the ruleset. That layered structure gives casual players something to do immediately and gives pinball regulars a long arc to chase over many sessions.
Stern is offering Pro, Premium, and Limited Edition versions, all sharing the same core rules but scaling up mechanical and cosmetic detail. The Pro is the workhorse you’re likely to see in arcades and bowling alleys, while Premium and Limited Edition add more elaborate toys, lighting, and trim for home buyers and collectors who want the full treatment in a dedicated game room.
This machine sits between generations: kids who know Pokémon first and adults who know pinball first. By using biomes, catches, Gyms, and Team Rocket as the spine of the rules, Stern has built a table that feels like a physical remix of a familiar journey rather than a billboard with flippers tacked on. It’s a branded pinball experience that respects both the game and the license, offering something that can earn its keep in a lineup instead of trading on nostalgia until everyone gets bored.
