Punk Rock Pinball

Pinball tournaments sound intimidating until you realize it’s just a room full of friendly nerds who want you to come back.
• Why we finished dead last at first and still had more fun than anything else we tried
 • The real “skill gap” at most tournaments and why beginners belong there immediately
 • How pinball became our easiest way to meet people in Central Illinois without the drinking-first vibe
 • Dream Theme goes off the rails: Twin Peaks pinball, and we’d pre-order it without even seeing it
In this episode of the Punk Rock Pinball Podcast, Mike and Steph talk about the thing that fueled their pinball obsession more than any machine ever did: playing in tournaments. They get honest about how intimidating tournaments seem at first, how badly they finished in their early events, and why none of that matters once you realize the atmosphere is welcoming, casual, and genuinely fun. They break down what a typical monthly tournament crowd actually looks like, why the best players are usually helpful instead of gatekeepy, and the simplest advice for new players who just want to survive and not feel clueless. The conversation also gets into why pinball tournaments are an underrated social activity for adults and couples, especially if you’re looking for a hobby that gets you out of the house and meeting people without needing to revolve your night around drinking. They wrap with a “you choose” finals machine scenario and a dream theme that needs to exist: a Twin Peaks pinball machine built by Spooky.

What is Punk Rock Pinball?

The Punk Rock Pinball Podcast is hosted by Mike Felumlee and Stephanie Wysocki, co-founders of Live From The Rock Room and the team behind Punk Rock Pinball. Mike’s background in punk music (Smoking Popes) meets our day-to-day life running a growing pinball club, playing in tournaments, and building out the pinball community.

Each episode is us talking through the machines we’re enjoying, club updates, events we’re hosting, places we’re visiting, and whatever’s happening in pinball that week. It’s straightforward, conversational, and pulled from our actual experience in the hobby.

If you want a real, honest look at pinball from people who live in it every day, this is the show.