I'm afraid I wasn't %100 a fan of ten pin alley, while it had some great sound effects and bells and whistles, the actual gameplay always seemed a wee bit lacking being a fairly basic sterrio targeting fest, though I will freely admit I'm not exactly a huge sports game fan at the best of times, plus it is a very long time since I tried the game and its entirely possible I'd feel differently now .
On the other hand, I love the esp pinball games, indeed I've been waiting for more pinball party packs. They're imho some of the best arcade games we've got available with really rich sound effects and very adictive gameplay and were some of the first games I installed when first got my Windows 10 machine and I still pull them out and play them on occasion.
blindfold pinball is a nice enough game, but suffers unfortunately from the design flaw which sadly affects a lot of blindfold games titles, namely that they have gone for customisation progressive exploration.
For example, instead of making several pinball tables with different layouts and sound effects which would give different experiences to the player, they've simply got three basic table layouts, and a number of sound schemes.
So you can play the same table with starwars sounds or animal sounds if you want, and yet still have the same physics.
This is a problem in a lot of their games, indeed I think Blindfold racer is probably the only one of their titles I've played which actually has progressive difficulty and the chance for different unlockables and experiences rather than just giving you the maximum choice of game types and options at the beginning and let you cobble things together yourself.
then again I haven't played any of their titles for a while, and actually need to for the db, so its possible things have changed (I do gather they have a dog care sim in the works).
With our dreaming and singing, Ceaseless and sorrowless we! The glory about us clinging Of the glorious futures we see,
Our souls with high music ringing; O men! It must ever be
That we dwell in our dreaming and singing, A little apart from ye. (Arthur O'Shaughnessy 1873.)