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  2. Brunswick Bowling & Billiards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunswick_Bowling_&_Billiards

    The billiards division was established in 1845 and was Brunswick Corporation's original business. Brunswick Billiards designs and/or markets billiards table, table tennis tables, air hockey tables, and other gaming tables, as well as billiard balls, cues, game room furniture, and related accessories, under the Brunswick and Contender brands. [1]

  3. Play Pool Lucky Break 8 Ball Online for Free - AOL.com

    www.aol.com/games/play/masque-publishing/pool...

    At Lucky Break Pool, play free online pool hall 8-ball with your friends! Chalk up your favorite pool cue, customize the billiards table, and chat with other players.

  4. Comparison of cue sports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_cue_sports

    Pool, also called "pocket billiards", is a form of billiards usually equipped with sixteen balls (a cue ball and fifteen object balls), played on a pool table with six pockets built into the rails, splitting the cushions. The pockets (one at each corner, and one in the center of each long rail) provide targets (or in some cases, hazards) for ...

  5. Cue stick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cue_stick

    A player using a cue stick to push a billiard ball forward to move an object ball A pool cue and its major parts. [1]: 71–72 [2]A cue stick (or simply cue, more specifically billiards cue, pool cue, or snooker cue) is an item of sporting equipment essential to the games of pool, snooker and carom billiards.

  6. Kaisa (cue sport) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaisa_(cue_sport)

    Kaisa can be traced back to an 18th century game called Russian carambole played with two white cue balls and one red object ball. [1] By the beginning of the 19th century, a new variant added two more object balls: a blue ball and a black, brown, or yellow ball called the karolin, caroline, or carline which gave the game its name.

  7. American pool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_pool

    American pool is a term used in the United Kingdom, and sometimes more broadly outside North America, to refer to pool (pocket billiards) cue sports that make use of formerly American-style and now professionally world-standardised numbered billiard balls that have a standard diameter of 57 mm (2 + 1 ⁄ 4 in), as opposed to British-style unnumbered 56 mm (2 + 3 ⁄ 16 in) balls.

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