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Side by side
No scrolling through ten articles to decide. Here's every ball and shoe category we cover, stacked side by side — with links to the full reviews and where to buy.
How to read this
There's no single "best" — only the best for your game. These tables match each option to who it suits. Prices change constantly, so we link out to check current pricing. As an Amazon Associate and through other programs we may earn a commission, at no cost to you. Full method: how we review.
The three ball types most bowlers choose between. Most people want a plastic spare ball plus one of the others — start with entry reactive, graduate to strong asymmetric when heavy oil and your release demand it.
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| Plastic Spare | Entry Reactive | Strong Asymmetric | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coverstock | Plastic / polyester | Entry reactive resin | Strong solid/hybrid |
| Hook | Minimal (straight) | Moderate, smooth | Big, angular |
| Best oil | Any (spares) | Light–medium | Medium–heavy |
| Skill level | All levels | Beginner–intermediate | Advanced |
| Main use | Corner spares | First strike ball | Heavy-oil weapon |
| Our rating | 4.5 | 4.5 | 4.0 |
| Full review | Read → | Read → | Read → |
| Buy | Check price → | Check price → | Check price → |
Want a recommendation tailored to you? Take the which-ball quiz or see picks by price in balls by budget.
Three tiers, increasing in slide control and price. Casual bowlers are fine with universal shoes; regular league bowlers benefit from a dedicated slide foot; only multi-venue competitors need swappable soles.
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| Entry / Universal | Performance | Interchangeable | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slide soles | Same both feet | Dedicated slide foot | Swappable soles |
| Hand-specific | No (either hand) | Yes (R or L) | Yes (R or L) |
| Adjustable | No | No (fixed) | Yes (any approach) |
| Best for | Casual / beginners | Regular league | Tournaments / travel |
| Investment | Lowest | Mid | Highest |
| Our rating | — | 4.5 | 4.5 |
| Full review | Read → | Read → | Read → |
| Buy | Check price → | Check price → | Check price → |
More detail in the shoes deep-dive and our best shoes guide.
I'm brand new and bowl a few times a year. A plastic spare ball (or none yet) and entry/universal shoes. Don't overspend — see choosing a ball.
I just joined a league. An entry reactive ball, a plastic spare ball, and performance shoes. This setup carries most bowlers for years.
I have real revs and bowl heavy oil. A strong asymmetric ball (well fitted and laid out), a benchmark ball, a spare ball, and a roller bag to carry them.
I travel to different houses to compete. Interchangeable-sole shoes are worth it — consistent slide everywhere.