The cleanest sound in a pool hall isn't the cue strike — it's the tiny click of two balls touching gently before one of them drops. That single click is the difference between a good edit and a great one. These 56 billiard sound effects respect every register: the sharp crack of a cue strike on the break, the bright clink of object-ball collisions, the wooden thud-then-rattle of a pocket drop, the dry rub of chalk on a cue tip, and the wider pool hall ambience of low conversation and clattering racks.
Sports edit creators reach for the cue strike and clink takes because they land cleanly over a slow-motion shot. Film and TV editors use the pool-hall ambience under bar scenes where pool is happening in the background — it places the audience without needing the camera to show the table. For comedy, the pocket-drop tinkle works as a punchline tag. Grab any clip free, no signup, no licence to chase later.