Quoted from DaanNL:Here a short revieuw about a Stern Game of Thrones Pro on route after two years. The game is at the basement of an hotel next to the hotelbar. On the day there is almost nobody there, most plays are at night. All players are casual players of the hotel.
Problems on route:
Besides an broken rubber, coins stuck in the machine there were no techincal problems. The quality seems just fine for a machine who is on power 24/7. Visiting the location every month to check and clean. The most problems we had with not an original Stern flipper rebuild kit so we had to replace that within a week because the flipper didnot went down quick enough.
Bookkeeping:
Most games are with three balls a game, some periods with 4 balls a game. Casual player mode
GOT is one of those games where choosing casual player mode will severely limit the gameplay. I remember a distributor telling me that games shipped with that mode standard and you had to make a change in adjustments to allow players to choose any of the available houses, and play the whole game. After playing the game in casual mode for a short while, it was clear that casual mode wasn't the best choice for my location. GOT is a game with a strong element of strategy as you can choose different houses and play the game differently depending on your house selection.
After 21,000+ plays, GOT is still doing well on location and has some fan favorites. Over 150 of these plays are over 15 minutes long, so there are some strong players frequenting the game. In all those plays, I have had to replace all the opto switches-some more than twice, about a dozen rollover switches, an SD card, repaired broken wires at all the stand up targets, swapped out one node board, replaced the sword lock bracket, rebuilt flippers several times including replacing three EOS actuators, and LEDs and rubber as needed. Playfield is holding up fine.