I was intrigued to see if Brunswick Pro Billiards could top the table in the genre and itch that scratch for potting balls right, left and centre. This arrived many years ago and over time the player base thinned out and I don’t know about you, but something is exciting and thrilling about playing a game of this nature against human opponents.īrunswick Pro Billiards is developed and published by Farsight Studios and pockets its way onto all platforms, but for this review I played on Xbox Series X. Now the last Pool game I think is worthy of a mention that excelled on a console was Pure Pool which was developed by Voofoo Studios and published by Ripstone Games. But for the most part it can be enjoyed even if you get a drilling and it’s not as long as a game of Snooker either. Sure you’re going to have exceptionally skilled pool players across both as it does convert to a sport at the end of the day. But what I adore about Pool is that anyone can enjoy it from any skill level in real life and I feel that converts to video games too. I’m a sucker for a billiards or pool game, many hours spent in an office job with a hidden browser with thousands of games racked up in Yahoo Pool.įor the rest of the review I’m just going to call billiards pool as you can probably get my jist now. But Snooker just isn’t the same, it requires skill, patience and precision. Sure, we have had a fair few Snooker titles of late, with the solid entry of Snooker 19 and a few others. If there is one specific style of game that’s been missing for the past seven years of gaming it has to be titles that involve Billiards, or pool as we call it here in the UK.
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