Roar1975
Registered
In my opinion the advantage of purchasing a custom cue is that you can have the ability to customize it before it is made, meaning you can pick the wood, the joint, the butt, design materials, etc..., which customizes the cue for you and you only. Once a custom cue has been built for someone, it really isnt custom anymore because that cue was made for someone else or could simply just be made for an open market where the cuemaker made their own choices in design, which to me is a production cue. I think many people think a cue is more special, meaningful or valuable if it made by a certain cuemaker or that a cuemaker only makes 10 cues every 6 years so that an owner feels like owning a limited production cue is more special, which to me is kind of ridiculous, but understandable. My opinion is if a person views a pool cue as a piece of art, much like myself, than it can be important what you buy. If a person just wants a cue that shoots well and has a nice hit than theres 9 zillion cues for a 100 bucks that fit the bill. I own two Blud cues, a vintage sneaky pete that hits nicely thats my player and a custom that Im now selling that also hits nicely, but I like my sneaky better
. Next week Ill probably overpay for a tim scruggs sneaky pete that hits worse than my Blud sneaky cause it has a cool little "TS" on it. Why? Cause Im just as guilty of buying into the bullshit as the next guy. When Leonard croaks his cues will probably be worth millions. Why? Cause hes the first guy that sold a cue for 100K. And to someone, that means something :grin:. I laugh to myself because I can go buy a gorgeous vintage Brunswick Crown Gold 9 footer for $1500 which will cost me less than a vintage Scruggs cue. Hilarious. Thats like saying you can buy the farm for 100 bucks but the cow costs a 1000.
