Quoted from Pinball-Obsessed:My two cents...
I’ve had Dead Pool premium for 2 years now. And the sound was “Meh”
So recently I spent a little money on a speaker upgrade (Flipper Fidelity) to make it better, louder and have more bass. Definitely a plus with the music in this pin.
Well I never had the glass rattle before and now I do! So I have to install some anti rattle tape to address it or turn it down. Go figure.
Spooky puts good speakers in their games and we’re complaining about rattling? Would it be better if they used the cheap shit speakers that Stern does?
You're completely missing the point, though; the speakers are great, the bass levels are great, the music is great...the problem is the rattle caused by those. If I put in aftermarket speakers and it rattles, that's my own problem to deal with because it's an aftermarket mod and is not what the game/cabinet was designed around (the tolerances are different). If I buy something and don't modify it, it should work as designed and as intended. I have a very hard time thinking Scott wanted everyone to tune out the bass of his music, especially considering how integral bass is to his music. I also have a hard time believing the machine was intended to sound like a car belonging to a high school kid in the 90's with bass rattling every loose bolt on the car. It's not about audiophile grade shit, it's about it coming from the factory sounding like an overpowered aftermarket system in something that was never designed for that. Why does my TNA not sound like that, even though it has the same type of bass heavy soundtrack by the same person and similar speakers? A ported sub box. Spooky stopped putting those in on ACNC and R&M and I'm saying that that was a mistake that we the consumers now have to deal with. I don't want to live with shitty sound, so I'm forced to find a solution to a problem they had already solved on TNA and chose to remove most likely due to BOM.