Good comments!Great to see that the classic disciplines simply refuse to die. There's no money to be made, international tournaments are scarce, but the game simply has a reason to exist because it's basic, brilliant and beautiful. I have no idea about your current average in the free game, so forgive me if I'm telling you things you already know. When learning how to play the free game, it's important to know that there are three types of shots in that game, I call it the 1,2,100 principle. 1. A shot is so difficult, you'd be happy to make it, period. Don't make it harder than it already is. 2. A shot is makeable and there is potential for position. You try to play it in such a way that you will at least have this point, and the next one. 100. You have the balls nicely gathered, maybe even in the Americain position. You are thinking "production". Whether that's a run of 12 or a run of 199, that's depending on how far advanced you are. If you are a beginner, always decide if you're playing a 1 or a 2!
Korean 4 ball is just a version straight rail with an extra ball that is “poison” (opponents ball). Navigating around it or removing it is the goal. The free game always has unmovable static baulk zones in the corners, and in balkline the entire table has baulk zones.why not just play Korean 4 Balls, that combined all! If it was Good for Sang Lee. It should be play more in USA.
the balls are identical, the table being just smaller.I've only played on 10 foot tables, are smaller tables easier? Do the balls scale down also?
I played for the first time last night. I am strong using the rails but quite weak with line returns especially one rail returns, to maintain the American.the balls are identical, the table being just smaller.
small games are much easier on small tables. I would even say that you must learn & play the small games on small tables until you reach an A level ( over 20 general average aka 200pts in 10 innings or less) , else it's suicide/much too hard ...
in europe we learn & play the small games on 2m80 (9 feet , more usual size in France) or 2m60 (8 feet, more usual size in belgium/NL) .
then once we reach a good enough level ( over 20 average) , then we play on 3m10.
Caromball.com players by default play on the 9 foot table (2.54m) in most carom games. Your software should have this option.That's really interesting @erriep , I'd never thought about it before. I'm now considering adding a 9ft table to my simulator - but would probably do the Korean 4 ball game (in desperate attempt to attract good Korean players). I've never played that but after seeing some videos might just consider it....