Star Wars Pin

The home arcade movement continues to grow, and Stern Pinball is looking to get in on the action with Star Wars Pin — a home version of Star Wars pinball.

Designed and engineered for home use, Star Wars Pin features a custom sculpted Death Star and Imperial TIE Fighter, with color-changing playfield inserts, and speech and footage from the original Star Wars Trilogy.

“Star Wars Pin is designed to provide quality family entertainment and bring pinball fun to homes everywhere,” says Gary Stern, chairman and CEO of Stern Pinball Inc. “We are pleased to bring these pinball machines celebrating the Star Wars galaxy and adventures to our fans.”

Star Wars Pin

Marketed as an “affordable” home pinball machine, Star Wars Pin is still $4,499, so you may have to save up some Republic Credits if you’d like to add this to your own collection.

Star Wars Pin is made to be set up easily by casual pinball enthusiasts but is still crafted with the same care as Stern’s commercial machines.

Photos: Stern Pinball

About the author

James Zahn

James Zahn

James Zahn, AKA The Rock Father, is Editor-in-Chief of The Toy Book, a Senior Editor at The Toy Insider and The Pop Insider, and Editor of The Toy Report, The Toy Book‘s weekly industry newsletter. As a pop culture and toy industry expert, Zahn has appeared as a panelist and guest at events including Comic-Con International: San Diego (SDCC) Wizard World Chicago, and the ASTRA Marketplace & Academy. Zahn has more than 30 years of experience in the entertainment, retail, and publishing industries, and is frequently called upon to offer expert commentary for publications such as Forbes, Marketwatch, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, USA Today, Reuters, the Washington Post, and more. James has appeared on History Channel’s Modern Marvels, was interviewed by Larry King and Anderson Cooper, and has been seen on Yahoo! Finance, CNN, CNBC, FOX Business, NBC, ABC, CBS, WGN, The CW, and more. Zahn joined the Adventure Media & Events family in 2016, initially serving as a member of the Parent Advisory Board after penning articles for the Netflix Stream Team, Fandango Family, PBS KIDS, Sprout Parents (now Universal Kids), PopSugar, and Chicago Parent. He eventually joined the company full time as a Senior Editor and moved up the ranks to Deputy Editor and Editor-in-Chief.

archivearrow-chevron-downarrow-chevron-left-greyarrow-chevron-leftarrow-chevron-rightarrow-fatarrow-left-blackarrow-left-whitearrow-right-blackarrow-rightarrow-roundedbookscalendarcaret-downclose-whiteclosedocumenteditorial-archiveeyefacebook-squarefacebookfilesgifthamburgerheadinghearthomeinstagram-squareinstagramlatestlinkedin-squarelinkedinmailmedia-inquiresmessagenewsopen-boxpagination-leftpagination-rightpauseplayprintproduct-archiverecent-productssearchsharesort-filterspotifysunteamtiktoktime_purpletimetrendingtvtwitter-squaretwitteryoutube