How reactive resin behaves
Reactive resin is porous and tacky, gripping the lane hard for a strong, often angular hook with plenty of backend. It's the default modern strike-ball material because it maximizes hook potential and entry angle. The trade-off is that it can be too much on dry or short patterns, and it burns through energy faster. Detail in how balls work.
How urethane behaves
Urethane is smoother and less aggressive. It hooks less and more predictably, with a rounded, controllable motion and a gentler backend. For decades it was eclipsed by reactive, but its control has made it a favorite again — especially on tricky conditions where reactive over-reacts.
Why urethane is making a comeback
On shorter and flatter patterns, urethane's controlled motion and lower friction can actually carry better than a reactive ball that hooks too early or too sharply. Many competitive bowlers now carry urethane specifically for these conditions. It's less about nostalgia and more about the right tool for a demanding lane.
Control vs. hook: which do you need?
Want maximum hook and entry angle on medium-to-heavy oil? Reactive. Want predictability and control on dry, short, or flat patterns where reactive is unmanageable? Urethane. Many serious bowlers own both and choose based on what the lane is giving them — see lane play.
What about beginners?
Most beginners are still best served by an entry-level reactive ball (predictable hook to learn on) plus a plastic spare ball. Urethane is usually a later, more deliberate addition once you understand lane conditions well enough to know when you need it. See best beginner balls.
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Compare ball types side by side on our comparison page, or see picks in best hook balls.