Something about drinking brings out the competitive side in us, as long as there's a bar, pool table, dart board, or a deck of cards not too far off. 
With the advent of digital technology, bars today are adding new games to complement their existing lot of traditional bar games, such as pool tables, darts, and pinball machines, hoping to draw in customers and having them want to stay for a spell.
Technology has only broadened the possibilities for bar games. Besides the usual mainstays, bars are increasingly adding Wii, the Nintendo's blockbuster video-game console.
Here's a quick, far from comprehensive, look at bar games through the ages:
Skittles: First found in English pubs, this one goes back to the third century, with German monks being the pioneers of this game. From what we can tell, it's an early variant of bowling and other games that involve setting things up and knocking them down.
I've never heard of Skittles. LOL! :embarrassed2:
Continuing:
Darts: Whoever thought that drinking, crowded rooms and throwing sharp objects would make for a good combination was a counterintuitive genius. What seems like a recipe for disaster has become the classic bar game for more than a century and remains competitive with the newfangled games today. Granted, we no longer use blowpipes for the darts, as they did in the early days, and rules may change from region to region and from bar to bar, but the darts game of today has remained remarkably similar to its origins.
Pool/billiards/snooker: Quintessential as darts may be to the bar world, there has yet to be a classic movie about it, like "The Hustler" or "Color of Money" ("Bullseye!" a 2006 film about a dart champion who retires after his father is killed in lawn darts, doesn't count). That's why we have pool. And you never have to travel far to find a pool table. They're not regulation size, you say? Go to a pool hall, sticklers, not a bar.
Trivia: This one also seemed like a doomed idea. Go to a bar, just so you can answer questions about things you haven't thought about since your high school history classes? But let players come up with vulgar team names and a chance to win a cash prize, and trivia contests in the state have taken off. Anna Liffey's has been going gangbusters with its Tuesday night trivia competition for years. McKinnon's Pub on Asylum Street has made Thursdays its trivia night for the last six months.
Pinball machines: Said to be a derivation of bowling, and the aforementioned German monk pastime of Skittles, pinball machines started showing up in bars shortly after World War II. Though they no longer have the cultural cachet that they once did, when they were the focus of rock musicals, they've adapted to the digital age and remain an enduring stable of drinking establishments.
Foosball: Remember that collective existential crisis we went through when Deep Blue, the IBM-created computer, beat world chess champion Garry Kasparov at his own game? "What hath the humans wrought?" we cried. Or something like that. That's nothing compared to our grief when robots will finally be able to beat us at foosball.
A couple years ago, we went to a bar in Denver named Paradise Billiards. Aside from the numerous 9-footers, they had big screens all over the room, where people could play poker with each other, i.e., poker tournaments. There were mobile joysticks for the competitors. There was a little gambling, under the table so to speak. Each person could pay $5 or $10 to play in a poker tournament, and the winner would win a little chunk of cheese. It was fun!
Source: http://www.courant.com/entertainment/hc-bargames.artmar14,0,4237158.story [Retrieved 14 March 2009]
In order to make a profit, pool alone just doesn't seem to bring as much profit as it once did, but people sure do enjoy playing it still. The bars of today, though, are quite different, with a variety of new games. I can remember playing PacMan in the bars, but today, there's digital pinball, golf machines with golf tournaments for money, and one bar in my area even has a weekly poker game for the patrons, with free trips as the prizes.
Angela Lacaprucia of Wethersfield is entertained by Linsie Esau of Hartford as he playfully brandishes a pool cue toward co-worker Tara Blackmon of Meriden (off camera) after he sank the eight ball at City Steam, a cool pool bar somewhere in New England. :smile:

With the advent of digital technology, bars today are adding new games to complement their existing lot of traditional bar games, such as pool tables, darts, and pinball machines, hoping to draw in customers and having them want to stay for a spell.
Technology has only broadened the possibilities for bar games. Besides the usual mainstays, bars are increasingly adding Wii, the Nintendo's blockbuster video-game console.
Here's a quick, far from comprehensive, look at bar games through the ages:
Skittles: First found in English pubs, this one goes back to the third century, with German monks being the pioneers of this game. From what we can tell, it's an early variant of bowling and other games that involve setting things up and knocking them down.
I've never heard of Skittles. LOL! :embarrassed2:
Continuing:
Darts: Whoever thought that drinking, crowded rooms and throwing sharp objects would make for a good combination was a counterintuitive genius. What seems like a recipe for disaster has become the classic bar game for more than a century and remains competitive with the newfangled games today. Granted, we no longer use blowpipes for the darts, as they did in the early days, and rules may change from region to region and from bar to bar, but the darts game of today has remained remarkably similar to its origins.
Pool/billiards/snooker: Quintessential as darts may be to the bar world, there has yet to be a classic movie about it, like "The Hustler" or "Color of Money" ("Bullseye!" a 2006 film about a dart champion who retires after his father is killed in lawn darts, doesn't count). That's why we have pool. And you never have to travel far to find a pool table. They're not regulation size, you say? Go to a pool hall, sticklers, not a bar.
Trivia: This one also seemed like a doomed idea. Go to a bar, just so you can answer questions about things you haven't thought about since your high school history classes? But let players come up with vulgar team names and a chance to win a cash prize, and trivia contests in the state have taken off. Anna Liffey's has been going gangbusters with its Tuesday night trivia competition for years. McKinnon's Pub on Asylum Street has made Thursdays its trivia night for the last six months.
Pinball machines: Said to be a derivation of bowling, and the aforementioned German monk pastime of Skittles, pinball machines started showing up in bars shortly after World War II. Though they no longer have the cultural cachet that they once did, when they were the focus of rock musicals, they've adapted to the digital age and remain an enduring stable of drinking establishments.
Foosball: Remember that collective existential crisis we went through when Deep Blue, the IBM-created computer, beat world chess champion Garry Kasparov at his own game? "What hath the humans wrought?" we cried. Or something like that. That's nothing compared to our grief when robots will finally be able to beat us at foosball.
A couple years ago, we went to a bar in Denver named Paradise Billiards. Aside from the numerous 9-footers, they had big screens all over the room, where people could play poker with each other, i.e., poker tournaments. There were mobile joysticks for the competitors. There was a little gambling, under the table so to speak. Each person could pay $5 or $10 to play in a poker tournament, and the winner would win a little chunk of cheese. It was fun!

Source: http://www.courant.com/entertainment/hc-bargames.artmar14,0,4237158.story [Retrieved 14 March 2009]
In order to make a profit, pool alone just doesn't seem to bring as much profit as it once did, but people sure do enjoy playing it still. The bars of today, though, are quite different, with a variety of new games. I can remember playing PacMan in the bars, but today, there's digital pinball, golf machines with golf tournaments for money, and one bar in my area even has a weekly poker game for the patrons, with free trips as the prizes.
Angela Lacaprucia of Wethersfield is entertained by Linsie Esau of Hartford as he playfully brandishes a pool cue toward co-worker Tara Blackmon of Meriden (off camera) after he sank the eight ball at City Steam, a cool pool bar somewhere in New England. :smile:
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