Apps Games Articles
Pooking - Billiards City
MOUNTAIN GAME
Rating 4.5star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
star icon star icon star icon star icon empty star icon
4.3

One-line summary Pooking - Billiards City is easy to recommend if you want quick, satisfying pool on your phone, but I’d hesitate if you need deep realism or a completely interruption-free free-to-play experience.

  • Installs

    100M+

  • Developer

    MOUNTAIN GAME

  • Category

    Sports

  • Content Rating

    Everyone

  • Latest version

    3.0.32

  • Package

    com.billiards.city.pool.nation.club

In-depth review
Pooking - Billiards City knows exactly what kind of mobile game it wants to be. From the first few rounds, it presents itself as a fast, approachable pool game built for short sessions, simple controls, and instant feedback. After spending time with it, that identity feels very clear: this is not a hardcore billiards simulator, but it is a polished and genuinely enjoyable pick-up-and-play arcade pool game that gets a lot right. What stood out immediately was how easy it is to jump in. Many cue sports games on mobile either overload the screen with systems or bury the actual fun under too many menus and currencies. Pooking - Billiards City feels lighter than that. Aiming, lining up a shot, and sending the cue ball across the table all feel intuitive within minutes. Even if you have never spent serious time with a mobile billiards game, the basic interaction is easy to understand. That accessibility is one of the app’s biggest strengths. It lowers the barrier to entry without making the experience feel flimsy. The second thing the game gets right is pacing. This is a very convenient game to play in small bursts. A round can fit into a coffee break, a commute, or a few spare minutes before bed. There is very little friction between opening the app and actually taking shots. That matters more than it sounds. Mobile games live or die on whether they respect your time, and Pooking - Billiards City usually does. It moves with enough speed to stay engaging, and there is a satisfying rhythm to clearing balls and setting up the next shot. Visually, the game also makes a good first impression. It does not need hyper-realistic presentation to work, and thankfully it does not overreach. The tables are readable, the balls are easy to track, and the overall look is clean enough that you can focus on angles and timing instead of fighting visual clutter. There is a straightforward, almost old-school mobile game charm to it. In practical use, that simplicity helps more than flashy effects would. The game is easy on the eyes and easy to read at a glance, which is exactly what this kind of title needs. That said, the app is at its best when you accept it on its own terms. If you go in expecting a deep simulation of real-life pool physics and nuanced table play, you may come away a little underwhelmed. The shot-making is fun, but the overall feel leans more toward accessible game logic than true-to-life billiards nuance. There is enough here to make positioning and basic planning matter, but not enough to make every shot feel like a simulation enthusiast’s dream. That is not a fatal flaw, but it is an important expectation to set. A second issue is that, like many free mobile games, the experience can lose some of its smoothness when monetization gets in the way. The core gameplay loop is enjoyable, but interruptions can break the flow. In a game built around short, satisfying rounds, any pause between that satisfaction and your next game feels more noticeable than usual. I never felt the game itself was unplayable because of it, but I did feel that the clean rhythm of play was occasionally undercut by the realities of the free-to-play format. The third weakness is repetition. Pool is naturally repetitive in a good way when the mechanics are strong, but there is a fine line between relaxing familiarity and sameness. Over longer sessions, Pooking - Billiards City can start to show its limits. The essential activity remains pleasant, but the sense of discovery tapers off. This is a game I enjoyed most in short bursts rather than marathon sessions. Used that way, it feels sharp and well-targeted. Played for too long at once, it starts to feel more mechanical. Even with those caveats, I found myself coming back to it because the fundamentals are solid. There is a dependable satisfaction in judging an angle correctly, seeing a shot drop cleanly, and moving through a round without friction. The game does not pretend to be more complicated than it is, and that honesty works in its favor. It is built for people who want the fantasy of pocketing clean shots on a phone screen without dealing with a steep learning curve. So who is this for? It is for casual players, people who want a relaxing skill game, and anyone looking for a dependable offline-style-feeling mobile pastime that is easy to dip into. It is also a good fit for players who like sports or tabletop games but do not want to commit to something demanding. If you enjoy lining up shots, seeing immediate results, and progressing through straightforward pool challenges, this app delivers that very well. Who is it not for? It is not ideal for players seeking a serious competitive billiards sim, nor for those with very low tolerance for the stop-and-start annoyances common in free mobile games. It is also not the best match for someone who needs a lot of variety layered on top of the core mechanics to stay engaged for long stretches. Overall, Pooking - Billiards City succeeds because it understands the mobile format. It is smooth to control, quick to enjoy, and visually clear. Its limitations are real: it lacks the depth of a more advanced pool game, the free-to-play structure can interrupt the mood, and extended sessions reveal some repetition. But for what it sets out to do, it does it well. I came away seeing it as a strong casual pool game—one that is easy to recommend to most mobile players, provided they want convenience and satisfaction more than realism and depth.