Updated June 2026
Professional Pool Player Cues Questions
More than half of the top 20-ranked professional pool players use carbon fiber shafts, and the Predator REVO is the most-used carbon fiber shaft on the professional tour. Beyond shafts, specific cues popular among pros include the Predator Blak Series, P3 Series, and 10K Series. World champions across 8-ball, 9-ball, 10-ball, and 3-cushion carom use Predator equipment.
Professional players switched to carbon fiber pool cues for four reasons: tournament-consistent performance regardless of climate or venue, lower cue ball deflection on side-spin shots, dimensional stability that survives travel, and effectively unlimited service life. The combination eliminates performance variables that used to cost matches and reduces the mental load of adapting to each tournament venue.
No. The performance benefits of carbon fiber pool cues apply at every skill level. Amateurs may actually benefit more in practical terms — the dimensional stability is more useful for players who don't realize how much shaft variation affects their game, and the low-deflection performance makes spin shots more achievable for players still learning. Carbon fiber is the right choice for any serious player, not just professionals.
Predator REVO is widely regarded as the top carbon fiber pool cue shaft and is the most-used carbon fiber shaft on the professional tour. REVO was the first carbon fiber composite pool cue shaft engineered specifically for billiards using aerospace-grade materials. Other carbon fiber shafts exist on the market (Meucci, Cuetec, Rhino, and others), but REVO remains the benchmark and is the choice of more professional players than any other carbon fiber shaft.
No, not all professional players use carbon fiber. Some elite-level players still prefer the traditional feel of maple wood, particularly in disciplines like one-pocket and straight pool, where the softer feel of wood is valued. However, the majority of top-ranked professional players have switched to carbon fiber, particularly in 9-ball, 10-ball, and rotation games, where the technical advantages compound most.