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Pocket Billiards

Pocket Billiards

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  • Platform: Odyssey 2
  • Release Date: 1978
  • Similar Games: Billiards (Commodore 64/128), Trick Shot (Atari Video Computer System)

Game Description

Pocket Billiards! is a pool simulation suffering from poor gameplay, questionable physics, and a limited aiming range. It can play Eight Ball and Rotation, but is no substitute for the real thing. ~ William Cassidy, All Game Guide

Roots & Influences

Though predated by Atari's Pool Shark for the arcades, Pocket Billiards! was the first console pool game. ~ Brett Alan Weiss, All Game Guide

Production Credits

Designer: Ed Averett ~ Skyler Miller, All Game Guide

 
 
WordNet: pocket billiards
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: any of various games played on a pool table having 6 pockets
  Synonym: pool


 
Wikipedia: pocket billiards
Pocket billiards at a pub in Groningen, Netherlands
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Pocket billiards at a pub in Groningen, Netherlands
8 ball pool in Beijing, China
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8 ball pool in Beijing, China

Pocket billiards, most commonly referred to as pool, is the general term for a family of games played on a specific class of billiards table, having 6 receptacles called pockets (or "holes") along the rails, in which balls are deposited as the main goal of play. Cue sports that are played on pocketless tables are generally referred to as carom billiards.

History

Outside the cue sports industry, pocket billiards is almost exclusively referred to as "pool," due to a perhaps unfortunate association with the "poolrooms" where gamblers "pooled" their money to bet remotely ("off-track") on horse races. Because these venues often provided billiard tables, the term "pool" became synonymous with billiards, and though the original "pool" game was played on a pocketless table, the name stuck to pocket billiards as it gained in popularity. Though the traditional view of billiards as a refined and noble pastime did not blend well with the low-class connotations of gambling, the billiards industry's attempts to distance itself from the term "pool" beginning in the late 19th century were largely unsuccessful.

There are hundreds of pocket billiards games. Some of the more well known include eight-ball, nine-ball, straight pool, and one-pocket. The game of snooker is played on a table with pockets but is considered to be its own cue sport discipline and is governed internationally by the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association/World Snooker Association (professional) and International Billiards and Snooker Federation (amateur). There are also hybrid games combining aspects of both pocket and carom billiards, such as English billiards, American four-ball billiards, cowboy pool and bottle pool.

Pocket billiards is more popular than carom billiards in most countries of the world.[citation needed] Carom billiard games thrive in Asia, Europe and Latin America, but pool (especially in the form of nine-ball and eight-ball) and snooker are gradually taking over as the most widely played cue games.[citation needed]

As a competitive sport, pocket billiards is governed internationally by the World Pool-Billiard Association (WPA), which has national affiliates such as the US Billiard Congress of America (BCA), and which represents pocket billiards in the World Confederation of Billiard Sports which in turn represents all forms of cue sports in the International Olympic Committee.

Equipment

Pocket billiards uses different equipment from carom billiards. Other than the table having pockets, the balls for pocket billiards are generally smaller and range from 2.25 inches in diameter to 2.375 inches in diameter. (By comparison Carom billiard balls are generally 2-3/8 (2.4) in., or 61.5mm.[1] While UMB, the International Olympic Committee-recognized world carom billiards authority, permits balls as small as 61.0 mm, no major manufacturer produces such balls any longer, and the de facto standard is 61.5 mm. Modern pocket billiard tables range in size from 3.5 by 7 feet, to 4.5 by 9 feet. Modern cues are generally 58.5 inches long for pocket billiards while cues prior to 1980 were designed for straight pool and had an average length of 57.5 inches, while carom billiards cues are generally 56 inches long.[citation needed]

"Slang" use

In British slang, "pocket billiards" (or "trouser billiards") is used as a euphemism for a man scratching his genitals (or even masturbating) through his trouser pocket.[2][3] The equivalent Americanism is "pocket pool".[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ World Rules of Carom Billiard (English language version), Chapter II ("Equipment"), Article 12 ("Balls, Chalk"), Section 2; Union Mondiale de Billard, Sint-Martens-Latem, Belgium, 1 January 1989 (official online PDF scan, accessed 5 March 2007).
  2. ^ BBC News (1998-06-11). Modern man under pressure. (passing reference to British usage). BBC. Retrieved on 2007-04-17.
  3. ^ "Dear Rachel" (2006-04-23). His pocket billiards are driving me mad. (Agony aunt page, contains sexual references). Mirror Group Newspapers. Retrieved on 2007-04-17.
  • Shamos, Michael Ian. 1993-1999. The New Illustrated Encyclopedia of Billiards. ISBN 1-58574-685-1.
  • Oficial rules for European countries (which are the same like for USA and other)*[1]

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Copyrights:

Games. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Game Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pocket billiards" Read more

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