Compare 3D Pool prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Z-Software GmbH. Published by familyplay. Released on 6/17/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Simulation, Sports, Free To Play.

Sitting right at 50/50 on Steam, this bare-bones local billiards title does exactly one thing: put four pool variants on your screen without charging much for it. Manage expectations accordingly.

I'll be straight with you: I came to 3D Pool looking for something to scratch a couch-versus-a-friend itch, and that is basically the only itch it can scratch. Released back in 2016 by Z-Software GmbH, this is not a simulation for people who care about spin physics, English on the cue ball, or anything resembling a ranked ladder. It is a local-only billiards app with four game types, four room backdrops, and almost zero infrastructure around them. That framing matters, because the Steam community is sitting at roughly 51% positive across 45 reviews, which is about as decisive as a coin toss. The four modes on offer are eight-ball, nine-ball, ten-ball, and snooker. That coverage is wider than you might expect for a budget title, and snooker inclusion is genuinely rare at this price tier. You get three cue skins and three ball skins to swap between, and four different room environments that change the visual vibe without affecting gameplay. The AI opponent exists and adjusts to your level in theory, though community feedback suggests it is not going to give any serious billiards player a workout past the first hour. There is a local high score list, which is as far as the progression system goes. No online matchmaking, no ranked mode, nothing that requires a live connection. The multiplayer is strictly same-screen, same-computer hot-seat. Performance is the one area where the game holds up without argument. The proprietary engine runs buttery smooth at high resolutions with no notable frame drops, and community players have reported no crashes or bugs on modern hardware. For a 2016 title that never got significant post-launch updates, that stability is worth noting. The visuals are functional rather than impressive. Ball reflections look decent, and the table geometry is clean enough, but shadow rendering is jagged in spots and the overall presentation sits well below contemporaries like Pool Nation FX. Community members flagged the store trailer as choppy early on, which did not help first impressions, and the lack of any in-game control tutorial pushed at least one player to write their own Steam guide just to explain how the cue stick input works. That is a red flag for onboarding. The honest comparison here is to a mobile pool app you paid a couple of dollars for and occasionally pull up when someone is sitting next to you on a laptop. There is no netcode to evaluate because there is no online play. There is no ranked mode to burn through. There is no weapon-system depth, no build variety, no skill ceiling worth discussing. What you get is a clean, stable, local billiards session across four rule sets. If you have a friend next to you, want to play eight-ball or snooker, and have no interest in anything more elaborate, 3D Pool delivers that specific thing without fuss. Anyone expecting a proper billiards simulation or any kind of online community will bounce off within twenty minutes. Fred, Scout Team

3D Pool
CasualSimulationSportsFree To Play

3D Pool

Jun 17, 2016Z-Software GmbHfamilyplay
GamerScout Says

Sitting right at 50/50 on Steam, this bare-bones local billiards title does exactly one thing: put four pool variants on your screen without charging much for it. Manage expectations accordingly.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About 3D Pool

I'll be straight with you: I came to 3D Pool looking for something to scratch a couch-versus-a-friend itch, and that is basically the only itch it can scratch. Released back in 2016 by Z-Software GmbH, this is not a simulation for people who care about spin physics, English on the cue ball, or anything resembling a ranked ladder. It is a local-only billiards app with four game types, four room backdrops, and almost zero infrastructure around them. That framing matters, because the Steam community is sitting at roughly 51% positive across 45 reviews, which is about as decisive as a coin toss. The four modes on offer are eight-ball, nine-ball, ten-ball, and snooker. That coverage is wider than you might expect for a budget title, and snooker inclusion is genuinely rare at this price tier. You get three cue skins and three ball skins to swap between, and four different room environments that change the visual vibe without affecting gameplay. The AI opponent exists and adjusts to your level in theory, though community feedback suggests it is not going to give any serious billiards player a workout past the first hour. There is a local high score list, which is as far as the progression system goes. No online matchmaking, no ranked mode, nothing that requires a live connection. The multiplayer is strictly same-screen, same-computer hot-seat. Performance is the one area where the game holds up without argument. The proprietary engine runs buttery smooth at high resolutions with no notable frame drops, and community players have reported no crashes or bugs on modern hardware. For a 2016 title that never got significant post-launch updates, that stability is worth noting. The visuals are functional rather than impressive. Ball reflections look decent, and the table geometry is clean enough, but shadow rendering is jagged in spots and the overall presentation sits well below contemporaries like Pool Nation FX. Community members flagged the store trailer as choppy early on, which did not help first impressions, and the lack of any in-game control tutorial pushed at least one player to write their own Steam guide just to explain how the cue stick input works. That is a red flag for onboarding. The honest comparison here is to a mobile pool app you paid a couple of dollars for and occasionally pull up when someone is sitting next to you on a laptop. There is no netcode to evaluate because there is no online play. There is no ranked mode to burn through. There is no weapon-system depth, no build variety, no skill ceiling worth discussing. What you get is a clean, stable, local billiards session across four rule sets. If you have a friend next to you, want to play eight-ball or snooker, and have no interest in anything more elaborate, 3D Pool delivers that specific thing without fuss. Anyone expecting a proper billiards simulation or any kind of online community will bounce off within twenty minutes. Fred, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvplocal-multiplayertier:sub-5Local Hot-SeatPhysics-LiteSnooker ModeAI OpponentBare-Bones ProgressionCouch PvPNo Online Play

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 / 8 / 10 / 11
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0a
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
256 MB
Processor
Dual-Core Ghz

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Z-Software GmbH
Publisher
familyplay
Release Date
Jun 17, 2016

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert