Date: 13th - 17th May 2026 Location: REVA Halle Eissport, Robert Kunz-Straße 2b, 4840 Vöcklabruck, Austria In 2025, RS-Pinball head, Stefan Riedler, headed up the team organising the 2025 European Pinball Championship. It was held at the REVA Halle Eissport in the town of Vöcklabruck in the centre of the country. We were there and you can read our report here. The EPC was such a success with so much support, nobody wanted it to just be a one-off event. Thus, the idea developed to recreate the EPC, albeit on a slightly smaller scale, and turn it into an annual show. The Austrian Pinball Festival was born. The REVA Halle Eissport is an ice skating rink from October to February in which guise it hosts public ice skating, curling and ice hockey matches. Then, from the end of February, the ice is melted, the water drained, a floor laid, and the venue becomes a 1,800m2 exhibition and entertainment hall. At the end of March, the huge banner for the Austrian Pinball Festival (or APF) was hung over the entrance, six weeks before the doors opened on Wednesday 13th May. The REVA Halle Eissport – home of the Austrian Pinball Festival The APF is a five-day show starting with the Warm-Up Tournament on Wednesday afternoon – the first of eight tournaments held during the APF – and concluding late Sunday night with the finals of the High Score Tournament. Before we get to the competitive side, let’s take a look around the venue and the layout of the show. THE VENUE The attractions start before we even get through the doors. On the right is RS-Pinball’s latest promotional vehicle, a mobile mini-arcade. RS-Pinball’s pinball and video mobile mini-arcade The mobile mini-arcade can be taken to all kinds of gaming and collector shows, driven onto the show floor and opened up without the need to set up a stand. The mix of machines can vary, but for the APF it featured four pinballs, a multi-game video game and an Ice Cold Beer-style skill game. The pinballs were Pokémon, Dungeons & Dragons: The Tyrant’s Eye, Queen and Halloween. On the left side was the catering team and food truck. The main catering team were present with their gazebo most days, while a larger rotisserie food truck was also in attendance at the busiest times. The main team provided burgers, fried chicken, fries and salads, with schnitzel rolls also being available to purchase inside at the bar. The catering team The menu of food available outside Schnitzel burgers were available both outside and at the bar Should attendees require an alternative and more varied selection of food, a large Maximarkt supermarket was a short walk away across the car park. Maximarkt is the red building on the other side of the car park We used the Maximarkt several times during our stay to buy fruit, juices, wraps and sushi for some of our meals, and knew from last year’s EPC visit that the store would be closed all day on Sunday, so planned to buy extra on Saturday. What we hadn’t realised though was that the Thursday of the show was a public holiday in Austria (as well as several other countries), meaning the store was closed that day too. Lesson learned. Front Area In contrast to last year’s EPC event, the weather for the APF was cool and wet for most of the show. Things improved markedly by Sunday, but the low temperatures and cloudy skies helped maintain a pleasant atmosphere inside the REVA Halle Eissport. Inside the REVA Halle Eissport On the right as you enter the hall, the registration desk is where pre-paid guests could collect their badges and wristbands, while un-registered visitors could buy single or multi-day entries. The registration desk Entry to the APF free play area cost €25 per day, €45 for Saturday and Sunday or €75 for all five days. A family day ticket for two adults and two children was also available at €60. Packages with tournament entries could also be purchased, along with single tournament entries for those events not already fully subscribed. Prices for entry to the show and the tournaments The registration desk also sold a large selection of merchandise, from promotional T-shirts to toppers, translites, playfields and other pinball mods. Show T-shirts in various sizes More branded pinball shirts More shirts and translites Assorted playfields Models, mods and merch On the opposite side of the entrance – on the left as you enter – was the bar and food service counter. The bar Multiple large refrigerators held assorted beers, wines, soft drinks and water. Bean-to-cup hot coffee was also available. Payment was made using an A5-sized card which cost €20 and featured multiple boxes which were crossed off as drinks were purchased. The exact number of boxes crossed off each time depended on the type of the drink purchased. Schnitzel burgers could be purchased at the bar, as could hot pizzas. These were listed on a menu and then cooked to order in a bank of pizza ovens. Because food and drinks were not permitted in the free play or tournament areas, multiple tables and benches were set up next to the bar where they could be consumed. Tags were available on which you could write a name or initials and then hang it on you unfinished drink bottle for later use. The seating area in front of the bar At the far end of the seating area was the main stage with a large, bright LED screen. The main stage The stage was where announcements and trophy presentations were made, where the live stream of some tournaments was shown, and also where the seminars by the APF’s special guests took place. The main stage When the show was held, Pokémon was Stern Pinball’s current title. So, not only was one of each version of the game set up for guests to play, but a large inflatable Pikachu oversaw fair play. The LE, Premium and Pro Pokémon machines Pikachu kept an eye on the trio of Pokémon machines With the registration desk, bar and seating areas at the front of the hall, the middle section contained all the free play machines and vendor stands. Free Play Area The central area of the hall consisted of four corridors, each with a row of free play machines, vendor stands or homebrew games on either side. We’ll look at each row from left to right, but because we were at the show for all five days certain machines may not have been set up fully, weren’t switched on yet, or might have been out of action when we took our photographs. The start of the left-most row of free play games The start of the Jersey Jack Pinball section More JJP machines Two Turner Pinball titles plus two from Haggis Pinball At the end of the first row, Vincent Mods had a nice display of their toppers and other themed mods. Vincent Mods’ stand Game-specific toppers The second row of machines The second row of machines Three P3 machines Getting into the Stern section The end of the row as we come back to the bank of three Pokémon machines More Stern machines in row three More Stern machines – including two home models – in row three Pinball Brothers titles Some lesser-seen titles from Homepin, Pedretti, Pinball Adventures and even Stern Row four features Spooky Pinball games, starting with their latest, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice himself put in an appearance later during the show The full line-up of Spooky Pinball titles Both Halloween and Ultraman continue the line of Spooky games Two lesser-seen Spooky games Back on more familiar ground for the rest of the row Row five brings us to the start of the homebrew games. Some of these we saw in last year’s report, but even then in many cases there has been continued development to improve the quality of gameplay. This Black Knight 3000 adds a display and new rules to the Steve Ritchie classic More homebrews – a mix of original designs and rethemes Tales of the HTL Kapfenberg is an A-level school project by Sandro Ablasser and Dominik Pliso The game uses a steel playfield and uses the shape of their town to represent a brain Like the Gas Attack game from the Grossology exhibition, Buddy uses pinball as a biological teaching tool. The Buddy game used pinball to explain the digestive system This Muppet Show homebrew looked rather like a modified Gay 90’s game Barrels of Fun titles – with and without toppers – in the fifth row Moving over to row six, Hexa Pinball had a stand showing their latest The Three Musketeers prototype alongside two of their previous Space Hunt games. The Hexa Pinball stand with their new The Three Musketeers game Karin Kolbe’s stand had lots of essential pinball spares as well as quite a few ways to smarten-up your games’ appearance Then we come to more homebrews with customised, rethemed and totally new game designs Wolfgang Grauvogl’s The Rocky Horror Picture Show conversion game returned with full rules and AV assets This Flash was demonstrating the capabilities of the Pinball Power Up Controller (PPUC) The Pinball Power Up Controller (PPUC) is an open source project to replace the hardware control system on Williams and Data East/Sega/Stern games right up to the SAM system, allowing you to write your own game rules and create your own DMD graphics. You can download the board designs from GitHub and have them made yourself, although talks are taking place for vendors to also sell ready-made systems. This Time Warp was also demonstrating the PPUC system Under the Time Warp playfield with the PPUC boards Then we come to three custom designs by Stefan Mader. Deep Blue Rage is an unusual custom design by Stefan Mader Tree House Club is another of Stefan’s creations, following the Pinball Circus concept of getting the ball up the ramps to reach the Tree House Stefan’s third game was a coffee table machine called Spectra 6 which used the same black and white colour scheme as Centaur. All the playfield sculpts are 3D printed and then joined together into continuous models. Stefan Mader’s Spectra 6 coffee table pinball If you’d like to learn more about their creation, the builds of Deep Blue Rage, Tree House Club and Spectra 6 are all documented on Pinside. Over on row seven, two working and one upcoming conversion projects by Alessandro Cacciola of SteelShot Pinball were on display. Lupin The 3rd (based on Diner) and Hokuto No Ken (based on Rollergames) were both at last year’s EPC, as was the work-in-progress Dirty Harry conversion, They Call Me Trinity, although the actual title of the game has changed in the past twelve months. Trinity, Hokuto No Ken and Lupin The 3rd by Alessandro Cacciola Alessandro’s SteelShot Pinball had a stand next to his games, selling multiple ways to bling up your games, from side rails to speaker panels, shooter rods and bottom aprons. The SteelShot Pinball stand Items on the SteelShot Pinball stand Pinball Parts also had a stand at the APF, selling some hard-to-find components as well as more familiar ones. The Pinball Parts stand The eighth row began with a showcase of the six American Pinball titles Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland was also here to play, with the creator, Melvin Brouwer-Williams, also at the show Ivan Cicognani brought these four beautified restorations to showcase his Pinball Italy company’s work An invitation to examine the workmanship inside the game Finally in this row was a set of four games all coming from Germany. The first three are conversions – Miss World (Bally’s KISS), Wild Schütz (Bally’s Strikes & Spares) and La Retata (Williams’ High Speed) – by Geiger, while the fourth, Sexy Girl, is a semi-original design by Arkon but based on Bally’s Playboy layout with a projector window added. Four German-made games At the start of each day, the pinball cleaning crew were hard at work The free play area wasn’t entirely populated with pinballs though. Four amusement machines were set up at the front on the right to provide some silver ball alternatives. The table football (foosball/baby-foot/etc.) was a popular diversion for kids and adults alike Later in the evening, the competition became quite fierce The dance machine was definitely for the younger guests If you’ve played Ice Cold Beer you’ll be familiar with these Lucky Bowl and Beer Fest games Tournaments Area The back of the hall featured three areas dedicated to tournaments. Their designation was indicated by signs hanging from the rafters. On the left was the High Score Tournament. The High Score Tournament area On the right side were four rows of machines for the main Austrian Pinball Masters tournament. Each row was dedicated to a specific group of players (Group 1 – Group 4) for the qualifying rounds. Groups 1 & 2’s area The machines used for Group 1 (left) and Group 2 (right) Groups 3 & 4’s area The machines used for Group 3 (left) and Group 4 (right) Large touchscreen monitors at the entrances to each group’s area let players check their upcoming matches, record the outcomes and check their qualifying standings. The monitors at the entrance to the tournament group machines Upcoming matches and current standings on the Matchplay system At the far end of the hall were the machines for the Classic Tournament. Some of the machines for the Classic Tournament More Classic Tournament machines Classic Tournament machines with a streaming rig in place Christophe Berry streamed many of the later stages of several tournaments on his HaleMary12 Twitch channel. The stream of the tournaments on the HaleMary12 Twitch channel Christophe at his streaming desk The more premium trophies for the tournament were made by Vid Kuklec who also made similar awards for last year’s EPC. Trophies for the numerous tournaments The bespoke trophies by Vid Kuklec You can take a full look all around the first Austrian Pinball Festival in our exclusive Twenty-Four Minute Tour, all shot in ultra high-definition 4K. SEMINARS This year Stefan invited several special guests, four of whom made presentations on the main stage on Saturday. APF organiser, Stefan Riedler of RS-Pinball The talks were all streamed live by Pinball News on the Pinball News Twitch channel, and also uploaded to our YouTube channel. Streaming and recording equipment for the seminars First up was Alice Lemoine from Hexa Pinball. Alice Lemoine Alice described some of the unique aspects of how Hexa Pinball makes the machines in the Bordeaux factory, including their playfield manufacturing methods. She then talked about the company’s second release, The Three Musketeers, which was available to play on the Hexa Pinball stand at the show. Then Aaron Davis and Brian Madden spoke about building your own pinball. Aaron Davis and Brian Madden Aaron is the co-founder of FAST Pinball hardware system while Brian originated the Mission Pinball Framework which is behind many homebrew and commercial pinball machines. Together they urged everyone in the audience to realise their dream theme by collaborating with friends and other members of the homebrew community to build their own pinball, describing the initial steps and explaining the ever-expanding range of products available. Later in the day, Eric Meunier from Jersey Jack Pinball gave a presentation about the making of the Harry Potter pinball. Eric Meunier Eric is the lead designer of Harry Potter and spoke about his love of the theme, the inspirations for the key mechanisms in the game and many of the challenges the team faced not only building the many components but also ensuring everything could be manufactured repeatedly, reliably and in quantity. Later in the evening, Pinball News Editor, Martin Ayub, helped by Dutch Pinball Open Expo organiser, Marcel van Kessel, put together an impromptu quiz to give away a bunch of great prizes generously donated by vendors exhibiting at the show, as well as from American Pinball, Spooky Pinball, Stern Pinball, Barrel of Fun and RS-Pinball too. Some of the prizes in the quiz On Saturday there was also a ceremony to present an award to the best homebrew game of the show. Show guests were invited to use a voting card to submit their rankings for all the homebrew games. The top selections from that process were then put before a panel of show guests to pick the overall winner. With so many ingenious and innovative games from which to pick, it was a close-run choice. However, the ultimate winner was Stefan Mader for his Deep Blue Rage machine. Stefan won a brand new pinball cabinet and backbox set with which to build his next project. Stefan Riedler presented Stefan Mader with the backbox part of the set on the stage. Stefan Mader’s Deep Blue Rage wins the Best Homebrew prize of a new pinball backbox and cabinet set TOURNAMENTS The first of many competitive events was the Warm-Up Tournament held on the Wednesday. Warm-Up Tournament 175 players took part, with play registration from 1pm and the first rounds at 3pm. There were seven rounds of 4-player groups playing a single game per round with the winner earning 7 points. Second place scored 4 points, with 2 points for third and 0 points for fourth. After seven rounds, the top 24 players had qualified for the play-offs. There was a tie for the last qualifying position, so a tie-breaker was played. The tie-break for the last qualifying place in the Warm-Up Tournament That made the qualifying list as follows, with the top 8 receiving a bye through the first round of play-offs: 1Viggo Löwgren49 pts.2Dominique De Cock44 pts.3Trond Vegard Olsen41 pts.3Arno Nöbl41 pts.5Samuel Coenen40 pts.6Jürgen Wünschmann39 pts.7Jürgen Letzel39 pts.7Michael Trepp39 pts.9Jakub Tkacz38 pts.10Albert Medaillon37 pts.10Lukas Ott37 pts.10Alexander Muer37 pts.10Erik Palfi37 pts.10Ramón Roig mateu37 pts.15Daniel Wroblewski36 pts.16Simon Wodok35 pts.17Guido Christiansen35 pts.17Abraham Siedler35 pts.19Michael Suck34 pts.20Eike Rothauge34 pts.21Timm Tesch34 pts.21Marcel Daniel34 pts.23Jens Knobloch33 pts.24Robert Glashuettner33 pts. The play-offs were head-to-head best-of-three matches which were played until just a final two competed for the top spot. They were top qualifier Viggo Löwgren and 10th place qualifier Lukas Ott. The final of the Warm-Up Tournament begins on Grand Lizard Game one was played on Grand Lizard, which Viggo won. Game two was on Deadpool. Viggo tilted early on his first ball which gave Lukas the opportunity to pull ahead on his second ball, which he did to end on 773M. Viggo tilts his first ball on Deadpool However, Viggo had a great second ball to overtake Lukas and end his ball with a score of 1.4B. That proved to be the winning score, as Lukas drained his third ball on 870M, giving Viggo the win. In the third place play-off, Dominique De Cock triumphed on Indiana Jones and The Sopranos to win 2-0 against Alexander Muer, who ended in fourth place. With the tournament ending at 22:35 when everyone else had left, the trophy presentations took place at 8:50am the following morning. Fourth place, Alexander Muer Third place, Dominique De Cock Second place, Lukas Ott Winner, Viggo Löwgren, wasn’t at the show yet, so his first place trophy was collected on his behalf. The trophies for the top four, with APF organiser, Stefan Riedler, and tournaments head, Arno Nöbl Main Tournament Qualification for the Main Austrian Pinball Masters tournament was held in four blocks – two on Thursday (A & B) and two on Friday (C & D). Players could choose in which of the four blocks they wished to play their qualifying games. Those in block A played their Main Austrian Pinball Masters qualifying matches on Thursday morning from 10am. Meanwhile, block B players played their qualifying matches in the Classic Tournament instead. Then, at 5pm they swapped over, so block A played Classic qualifying and B played Main. On Friday, the same thing happened with blocks C & D. Each block (A-D) was then subdivided into four groups (1-4) of sixteen players each. Everyone in each group played a single game against everyone else in their group, giving them 15 games to play. The four players from each group with the most wins proceeded to the play-offs which began at 9:30am on Saturday. Qualifying matches in the Main Tournament The 64 qualifiers were (in alphabetical order): Abraham SiedlerHervé PierruPiotr UlmanAlexander BienzeislerHugo RitterRamón Roig mateuAnders CarlssonJakub TkaczRoland SchwarzArchibald LefevreJohn van der WulpSebastian LasekArno NöblJoshua IlesSebastian MergetArvid FlygareJP CongnardShirin DopplerBart VolmanJérome BiseSimon MetzBen MoserKarin WalderSimon WodokBertram Søgaard HaunKatja RižnerStefan HeroldCarsten WieskeKim G. HansenStefan MoryDidier BezençonKurt PloierSzymon MarciniszynDieter WalscheidLukas OttTheodor KristensenDominique De CockMarcel DanielThomas MästermanEric HoenigMarkus StixTimber EngelbeenErik PalfiMartyn IlesTimm DollingerFerenc CsaplovitsMikko KulmalaTimm TeschFlorian HopfgartnerNenad MetelkoTimotej PonjevicFrank GoeltlNiels Zera’at KariefardValentí Cano BrullFrançois de WrangelNiklas OttValter OdlerFredrik LöwgrenPaul EnglertViggo LöwgrenGuido ChristiansenPeter AndersenHeiko HagedornPiotr Rubik The Main Tournament play-offs were played as best-of-seven head-to-head matches. First into the final was Arvid Flygare who cruised through the first four rounds before a close 4-3 win in the semi-final against Jakub Tkacz. Arvid met Theodor Kristensen in the final, who had a similar progression, with his only close match taking place in the semi-final with a 4-3 win over Viggo Löwgren. The first game of the final was No Fear. The final begins on No Fear No Fear was won by Theodor, but Arvid levelled the score with a win on Rush. Wins on Cyclone and Led Zeppelin put Theodor on the brink of winning the final, before Arvid came back with wins on Venom and Iron Maiden. That left NBA Fastbreak as the deciding game. Played for basketball points rather than pinball points, Arvid set a final ball total of 87 points for Theodor to catch. It looked out of reach following an outlane drain, but Theodor easily made the Million Dollar Shot to keep playing, and despite a few nervous moments, inched past Arvid’s total, stopping play when he reached 89 points. So, Theodor won and Arvid was second. In the third place play-off on Indiana Jones, Timber Engelbeen beat Jakub Tkacz. Fourth place, Jakub Tkacz Third place, Timber Engelbeen Second place, Arvid Flygare First place, Theodor Kristensen Those who weren’t playing currently playing in the Main Tournament or Classic Tournament could compete in the qualifying rounds for the High Score Tournament. High Score Tournament The High Score Tournament desk with current ranks and the queues for each machine Players could try to achieve their best score on all of the sixteen machines used for the tournament, with all scores ranked. They had unlimited attempts over the 30 hours of qualifying. At the end, their best 12 ranking points scores counted towards their overall total, with a maximum of two scores from any specific machine. 12 entries were included with registration, with further sets of 5 entries available to purchase. Qualifying in the High Score Tournament Qualifying continued until 9pm on Saturday, when the top 32 players had qualified for the play-offs with the top 8 receiving a bye through the first round. The qualifiers were: 1Timber Engelbeen2,239 pts.2Lukas Ott2,219 pts.3Joshua Iles2,206 pts.4Paul Englert2,205 pts.5Arvid Flygare2,190 pts.6Erik Palfi2,188 pts.7Viggo Löwgren2,178 pts.8Benjamin Kispal2,172 pts.9Peter Andersen2,161 pts.10Theodor Kristensen2,157 pts.11Ben Moser2,154 pts.12Bertram Søgaard Haun2,089 pts.13Timotej Ponjevic2,080 pts.14Balázs Pálfi2,071 pts.14Hugo Ritter2,071 pts.16Paul Jongma2,066 pts.17Hans-Joachim Meyer2,058 pts.18Michael Trepp2,052 pts.19John van der Wulp2,039 pts.20Jakub Tkacz2,027 pts.21Szymon Marciniszyn2,014 pts.22Hervé Pierru2,004 pts.23François de Wrangel2,003 pts.24Denis Ritter2,002 pts. The most qualifying entries played by those made it through was 97, the least was 37. The first round of play-offs took place on Saturday night after qualifying, with the remaining rounds played on Sunday after the Main Tournament had concluded. After a bye through round one, Arvid Flygare had three 3-1 victories to take him into the best-of-five final. His opponent was Warm-Up Tournament finalist, Lukas Ott, who also had a bye but followed that with two 3-0 victories and one 3-1 win. Lukas Ott and Arvid Flygare, the finalists in the High Score Tournament After a win on Junk Yard, a loss on Jackbot and another win on The Beatles, Arvid led 2-1 and only needed a win on Creature From The Black Lagoon to seal the win. Could Arvid win on Creature to win the final 3-1? In fact, Lukas won on Creature to level the score at 2-2, making the fifth and last game on Johnny Mnemonic the decider. Lukas starts on Johnny Mnemonic in the deciding game of the final In a fast game, after five minutes the game was decided, with Arvid winning and taking first place overall. In the play-off for third place, Erik Palfi beat Benjamin Kispal 2-0 on Revenge From Mars and Stern’s Jurassic Park. With the final ending at 10:15pm on the last day of the show, the trophy presentation took place immediately. The presentations were made by Stefan Riedler and Arno Nöbl. Fourth place, Benjamin Kispal Third place, Erik Palfi Second place, Lukas Ott First place, Arvid Flygare The top four in the High Score Tournament On Friday night there was a Women’s Tournament which began with a social quiz held in front of the stage. This was designed to get the players to know each other a little better before the pinball tournament began by creating teams of three to answer pinball-related questions. Answers were written on a sheet and the top team’s members would each win a trophy. The pre-tournament quiz in the Women’s Tournament Fun trophies for the winning team in the quiz After the correct answers were revealed there was a tie for first place, so a tie-breaker question was introduced where both teams had to try to guess the number of pinball bulbs in a jar. The tie-breaker question Whichever team was the closest would be the winner. And the answer is… The quiz winning team The Women’s Tournament didn’t start until 9:30pm, so a late finish was expected. The players in the Women’s Tournament In fact, there were nineteen rounds of head-to-head play after which the top four went into the final. Qualifying in the Women’s Tournament They qualifying results were: 1Shirin Doppler16 pts.2Sabine Ramsner14 pts.3Elli Paschalis13 pts.4Irene Mayrhofer12.5 pts.5Kristina Flygare12 pts.6Doris Weidmann12 pts.7Lea Muer11 pts.8Tirza Wichelhaus11 pts.9Anna Moosmann10 pts.10Yvonne Berreiter10 pts.11Geraldine Palladino10 pts.12Claudia Kalkbrenner10 pts.13Simina Banulescu9 pts.14Linda Alpstad9 pts.15Julia Palfi9 pts.16Alina Haid8 pts.17Siu Yin8 pts.18Natalie Ogris8 pts.19Vera Stobbe7 pts.20Romana Klug7 pts.21Susanne Schrittwieser7 pts.22Bianca Ostheim3 pts.23Simone Götzhaber3 pts.24Jenna Muer1 pts.25Katja Rižner1 pts. The final was played over three games – Radical!, Pinbot and Laser Cue. The four finalists in the Women’s Tournament Irene begins the final on Radical! After wins on Radical! and Pinbot, and with other the places going her way, Shirin had already won the final after two of the three games with 14 points to everyone else’s 4 points. The third game would, therefore, decide second, third and fourth. Shirin plays Laser Cue having already won the final Laser Cue was won by Sabine, with Elli second. Shirin was third and Irene fourth. So, Shirin was first overall, Sabine second, Elli third and Irene fourth. The tournament didn’t finish until after 2am, so the trophy presentation was held in the morning. Not unsurprisingly, most trophy winners were not yet back at the venue when the trophies were handed out, but the winner, Shirin, was. Trophies for the Women’s Tournament First place, Shirin Doppler Classic Tournament The Classic Tournament split all the players in each session into groups of four, with each group playing a single four-player game on a selected classic machine. Points were awarded for finishing position using the 7/4/2/0 system. The players and machines were displayed on screens The groups and machines were then mixed up for the next round. Eight rounds were played in this way, after which the twelve players with the most points had qualified for the play-offs on Saturday afternoon, with the top four receiving a bye through the first round. Players in the Classic Tournament qualifying stages Unfortunately, on Saturday afternoon we were busy streaming the seminars and then helping to judge the best homebrew game. As a result, the final rounds were over before we got there to watch. However, we can report that Viggo Löwgren defeated Michael Trepp 3-0 to reach the final. There, he met Thomas Mästerman who had a much closer 3-2 victory over Bart Volman. The final was played on Arena, Warlock and Pinbot, with all three wins going to Viggo, giving him first place. In the third place play-off, Michael Trepp had a 2-0 victory over Bart Volman on Skateball and Space Shuttle. Bart wasn’t present for the main Classic Tournament trophy presentation but did arrive a little later to collect his award for fourth. Fourth place, Bart Volman Third place, Michael Trepp Second place, Thomas Mästerman First place, Viggo Löwgren It is a tradition that at some point Stefan will lift someone onto his shoulder. Last year it was Abe Flips, this year Viggo received the honour. Viggo gets an extra lift after winning the Classic Tournament The top three in the Classic Tournament The Warm-Up, Main, Classic and High Score Tournaments were all IFPA-accredited, but there were also four tournaments run simply for fun and bragging rights. The Children’s Tournament was played on Sunday afternoon on a bank of Stern machines. Players… Assemble Play in the Children’s Tournament The results saw a win for Simon, with Paul second and Marlon third. 1stSimon2ndPaul3rdMarlon4thLukas5thMoritz6thJonathan7thMaria However, everyone won Lego prizes for taking part. Trophies and prizes in the Children’s Tournament While we are talking about Lego, one of the other fun tournaments was held on one of the more unusual machines, a Lego pinball. Lego Tournament The Schoko 42 Lego pinball The Schoko 42 Lego pinball was built by Rolf Brisberger using Lego Mindstorm. The flippers are manually operated, but the game includes switches, bumpers, targets, LED lighting and mechanical stepper motor reels for score and ball number. The Schoko 42 playfield The title ‘Schoko’ is German for ‘chocolate’ and sure enough, at the end of the game a small foil-wrapped chocolate ball is dispensed to the player. A tournament was run on the game to see who could achieve the highest score. Playing the Lego pinball The highest scorer was Simon Wodok with 16,000 points. In second place and just 450 points behind, was Arvid Flygare, while a further 450 points back on 15, 100 was Martin Wodok. Third place, Martin Wodok Second place, Arvid Flygare First place, Simon Wodok The top three in the Lego Tournament There was also a Team Tournament held on Saturday night. Team Tournament With so much else happening we didn’t get to see it in action but were there for the presentation of trophies. By the time the trophies were handed out, not all the team members were present at the show, or were busy playing in different tournaments. We will fill in the team details later when we get them, but here are the top three. The winners of the Team Tournament Second place in the Team Tournament Third place in the Team Tournament The end of the High Score Tournament’s final and the presentation of the trophies brought this inaugural Austrian Pinball Festival to a close. The funhouse is closed… The vendors are packing away… The load out begins Many thanks to Stefan, Julia, Arno and the huge team of volunteers who worked so hard long before, during and long after the show. While there was widespread agreement that it had been a great success with the tournaments both well-designed and well-run, it might seem odd to find out there will not be another APF next year. That’s not due to anything related to the APF itself, but simply because the German Pinball Association already has plans to hold an expanded GPA Expo in 2027, a month before the date an Austrian Pinball Festival would be held. The location for the GPA Expo is also not too far from Vöcklabruck, so the Austrian pinball community will be helping to support that event However, planning is underway for the APF to return to Vöcklabruck in 2028 and, with two years to organise things, there are even greater aspirations for the second Austrian Pinball Festival. In the meantime, we hope you have enjoyed our coverage of this year’s APF, our live streaming of the seminars and our recorded videos on YouTube, all available exclusively here at Pinball News.