telinoz
Registered
This is pure exercise in seeing what rules of Pool produce the correct result for a stronger player vs a weaker player.
Meaning, which one ensures the most skilled player wins.
Most people would have heard of Virtual Pool, #3 came out with best player on the game being Curly who breaks and runs and doesn't miss much at all.
I've been playing this game for 15 years or so on PC and now Phone and it is the most accurate physics model and control method for playing to date.
So, it is a good platform to try a controlled experiment for Pool games as the conditions are the same, the opponent plays the same, no issues with technique or cueing and the only thing you have to do right is shot selection via pattern selection and positional play. Pace/spin on cueball being the last control element.
I chose to it this way rather then real table and opponent as that adds more variables and would detract from a pure rule vs rule experiment.
100 Games of 9-Ball - I won 65 out of 100
100 Games of 8-Ball - I won 85 out of 100
Played in race to 5 sessions, alternating between 8-Ball and 9-Ball every 2 sets (meaning every time a 2x race to 5 was over) to keep things consistent as I played this out over 2 months when I had spare time.
Conclusion is that 9-Ball has a much bigger element of luck in it, the table is more open (space) to make positional play easier, there is no call shot again adding more luck to the game, you can win a game by potting 1 ball.
Basically 9-Ball is inferior to 8-Ball with regards to skilled player more likely to win.
I had noticed this trend in real play over many years, some players in League or tournaments would NEVER win a race to 3 or 5 set off me but at 9-Ball they sometimes did due some massive luck (mostly missing intended pocket but knocking something else in, or a tough table layout when I made 7 of 9 balls but missed a very hard shot to watch them knock in 2 balls...)
8-Ball played well by top players is great to watch, I would love to see more money at World level and more 8-Ball played to determine 'Pool' World Champion over 9-Ball.
I've satisfied my curiosity now as I don't think there is a better way of proving the differences between the games then the controlled experiment I just did.
Unless anyone here has another idea or wishes to discuss this?
Meaning, which one ensures the most skilled player wins.
Most people would have heard of Virtual Pool, #3 came out with best player on the game being Curly who breaks and runs and doesn't miss much at all.
I've been playing this game for 15 years or so on PC and now Phone and it is the most accurate physics model and control method for playing to date.
So, it is a good platform to try a controlled experiment for Pool games as the conditions are the same, the opponent plays the same, no issues with technique or cueing and the only thing you have to do right is shot selection via pattern selection and positional play. Pace/spin on cueball being the last control element.
I chose to it this way rather then real table and opponent as that adds more variables and would detract from a pure rule vs rule experiment.
100 Games of 9-Ball - I won 65 out of 100
100 Games of 8-Ball - I won 85 out of 100
Played in race to 5 sessions, alternating between 8-Ball and 9-Ball every 2 sets (meaning every time a 2x race to 5 was over) to keep things consistent as I played this out over 2 months when I had spare time.
Conclusion is that 9-Ball has a much bigger element of luck in it, the table is more open (space) to make positional play easier, there is no call shot again adding more luck to the game, you can win a game by potting 1 ball.
Basically 9-Ball is inferior to 8-Ball with regards to skilled player more likely to win.
I had noticed this trend in real play over many years, some players in League or tournaments would NEVER win a race to 3 or 5 set off me but at 9-Ball they sometimes did due some massive luck (mostly missing intended pocket but knocking something else in, or a tough table layout when I made 7 of 9 balls but missed a very hard shot to watch them knock in 2 balls...)
8-Ball played well by top players is great to watch, I would love to see more money at World level and more 8-Ball played to determine 'Pool' World Champion over 9-Ball.
I've satisfied my curiosity now as I don't think there is a better way of proving the differences between the games then the controlled experiment I just did.
Unless anyone here has another idea or wishes to discuss this?