Carom3D

Carom 3D

Carom 3D
Developer(s) Comworm
Publisher(s) Neoact
Platform(s) Windows
Release date(s)
1999
Genre(s) Sports simulationpool
Mode(s) Single-player, Multi-player

Carom 3D is a 3D, freeware online sports simulation video game released by Neoact in 1999.[1] It was initially a school project of a Korean student known as Comworm. It quickly gained in popularity in Korea in 2000, and the year after several thousand players across the world. It is a multiplayer online simulation of pool and billiards.

Overview

Carom 3D is at least in part an accurate simulation of eight-ball, nine-ball, rotation pool, three-ball, four-ball and original six-ball.[2] The game can be played in two different modes : first-person 3D perspective and fixed overhead view.

Until 2005 it was freeware. It progressively became a free-to-play game with bonus items (cues, custom 3D character and profile, participation to daily tournaments) sold from 1 to 5 USD.

The main aspect of Carom 3D is online confrontation with players from all over the world. Winning allows a player to get a better cue needed to perform high strength and full spin shots. Spinning, as in real life pool and billiards, takes an important role in Carom 3D, specially in pocketless games where most shots are not even possible without a deep knowledge of pool physics and spinning.

Closure of the server

From 2005 to 2010 more than one thousand users were playing at the same time every day on the Neoact servers, but the number of online players then decreased due to the lack of updates and Neoact focusing on other games (Astronest, Texas Hold'em, Fantasy Masters, Pokermania). At the end of 2013, Neoact closed its servers and gameplay ended.

References

  1. "네오액트 - Online game and solution". Neoact.com. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
  2. "Test du jeu vidéo Carom3D sur PC". Emunova.net. Retrieved 2016-02-09.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.