🕹️ New release: Lunar Lander Beyond

Jimmy White's 2: Cueball

aka: Billard Clubhouse, Billard Nights, Billares, Cueball, JWC2
Moby ID: 8101

Windows version

A great value combination of games, with all the important features spot on

The Good
The difficulty curve is excellent, and the range of match lengths gives variety.

There's a full trick-shot editor, allowing for all manner of shots to be set up, as well as several practice features including shot assistance. The view line is helpful for judging shots as well.

Considering its versatility the control system is easy to use and quick to master.

Graphics are excellent, with the detail in the surrounding rooms especially impressive, and the sound is accurate enough. The ball physics are realistic enough for you to know that every miss is your own fault.

The Bad
You can only replay a shot if a human player is taking the next one - so you can't look again at computer pots (to see what it did right) or your misses in a 2 player game (to see how it went wrong). Similarly, in the one-player practice mode you can only undo shots if you potted the previous one, making the feature less useful that it should've been.

The Bottom Line
A complete recreation of snooker and pool, as well as several bonus games - darts, draughts, a fruit machine and a recreation of Archer MacLean's C64 game Dropzone. Both snooker and pool feature 3D graphics which can be fully zoomed, rotated and moved. Shots can be set up form a number of angles, and then replayed.

Three variants of pool are featured - the UK and US 8-ball games, which can each be customized for the variety of rules found in pubs worldwide, as well as the thrilling fast-paced 9-ball game, where one well-planned shot can earn victory.

by Martin Smith (81664) on March 4, 2004

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