Medieval Madness
Machine Details
Manufacturer

Williams Electronics
Year
1997
Technology Era
Dot Matrix Display (DMD)
Machine Description
Released in 1997, Medieval Madness arrived at a time when pinball was waning, yet it instantly asserted itself as a classic. Designed by Brian Eddy for Williams, the game blended sharp comedy with mechanical spectacle: castles that crumbled, trolls that leapt from hiding, and voices that mocked the player with gleeful irreverence. Its cast of characters—recorded by Chicago improv actors—turned the medieval theme into parody, with bumbling kings, shrieking maidens, and quarrelsome trolls lampooning the conventions of high fantasy.
The playfield was both accessible and layered, inviting novices to topple castles while rewarding seasoned players with a deep, strategic rule set. Artist Greg Freres gave the game a playful, cartoon-gothic look, while sound designer Dan Forden stitched humor directly into the fabric of play. Each successful shot was not just scored but answered, making the machine feel alive with banter.
It stands as a pinnacle of late-era Williams design—a game that balanced technical innovation with a winking sense of theater, ensuring its place not only in pinball history but in its mythology.