Your post reminded me of when I bought my first pair of Decot eyeglasses for shooting. I opted for a pair with a height adjustable nose bridge. Thinking that it might be good to adjust them for pool. Well I drove myself crazy by worrying if I had them adjusted correctly. After two months I contacted Decot and they allowed me to exchange them for a fixed bridge frame. 17 years later I still use the fixed bridge pair.
Sometimes it is better not to have too many options!
In cuesports, it’s almost always better to not have too many options, in almost every situation. Playing snooker, one of the scariest things is leaving someone with no other option than a difficult long pot. They have no choice but to knuckle down and pot it.
I was playing a good friend one day. I left him hard up on the baulk cushion, snookered on all reds except one that was inline with the pink spot, also hard on the side rail. He couldn’t play safe off it. He potted it, took a pink and then 14 blacks and a clearance; 146.
I bought a Mezz Ignite, used it for a year, one day randomly put my HP2 back on, made a 99 and 140 playing straight pool. Spent the next 3 months switching shafts, totally head f^&*ed.
Played with Kamui clears for 6 years, tried a Zan Boost, ended up retipping my cue 6 times in about 2 months because I couldn’t decide what to use.
And on and on.
When I played snooker, I had one cue for 8 years until the ferrule broke, then another for 5 years. They were both single pieces of ash with Ebony spliced butts and I only ever used elk master tips, sometimes a blue diamond.
I love Mezz, but:
Mezz: Mind f%^&ing pool players since 1980.