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Design Guide

Game Room Setup Guide: Layout, Lighting & the Perfect Table

I've walked into hundreds of game rooms over the years. The best ones have one thing in common: the pool table is the centerpiece, and everything else is designed around it. Here's how to build a room that makes people say "when can I come back?"

By Billiard Home TeamUpdated Apr 2026

Step 1: Start with the Table, Not the Room

The biggest mistake I see is people designing their game room and then trying to fit a pool table into whatever space is left. Do the opposite. Pick your table size first, then design around it.

Use our room calculator to see what fits, or reference this:

  • 7ft table: Minimum 13' x 16' room
  • 8ft table: Minimum 13'6" x 17' room
  • 9ft table: Minimum 14'6" x 18'6" room

These minimums assume 58" cues. Want to add a bar along one wall? Add 3-4 feet to that side. Want spectator seating? Add 5+ feet. The table comes first. Everything else adapts.

Read our full size guide if you're not sure which table to get.

Step 2: Flooring

Your floor matters more than you think. A pool table weighs 700-1,000 lbs and needs to be perfectly level. Here's how each flooring type performs:

  • Concrete (garage conversion): The best foundation. Rock solid, doesn't flex. Just throw down a nice area rug or interlocking foam tiles for comfort. This is the most common game room setup in Southern California and it works great.
  • Hardwood: Excellent. Looks premium, easy to clean, stable. Use felt pads under the legs to prevent scratches. No issues with leveling.
  • Laminate / LVP: Works fine. Just make sure the subfloor underneath is solid. Floating floors can flex slightly under the weight, but we compensate with leveling shims during installation.
  • Carpet: Functional but not ideal. The table legs can leave permanent dents, and the carpet makes it harder to find dropped balls and chalk. If you have carpet, consider putting a large area rug under and around the table for a cleaner look (and easier cleanup).
  • Tile: Solid and easy to clean, but cold on bare feet. Throw down a rug. Also, ensure the tile is set evenly - uneven tile means more shimming during install.

Step 3: Lighting (This Makes or Breaks It)

Bad lighting is the #1 reason a game room feels like a basement instead of a billiard lounge. Good lighting transforms the space.

The rule: The playing surface needs even, shadow-free illumination. Overhead ambient lighting alone won't cut it. You need a dedicated table light.

  • Billiard pendant light ($100-500): The classic choice. A long fixture that hangs 32-36 inches above the playing surface. Three or four shades for even coverage. This is what you see in pool halls and it looks incredible at home.
  • LED light bar ($50-200): Modern, sleek, and effective. Good options on Amazon. Look for 5000K-5500K color temperature (daylight white) for the best ball visibility.
  • Recessed cans: If your ceiling already has recessed lighting, point them at the table. Not as dramatic as a pendant, but functional. Add a dimmer so you can set the mood.

Pro tip: Put your table light on a separate switch or dimmer from the room lights. During games, you want the table bright and the rest of the room slightly dim. It creates focus and atmosphere.

Step 4: The Essentials Checklist

Beyond the table and light, here's everything you need for a complete game room:

1
Wall-mount cue rack - Holds 6-8 cues plus your bridge and accessories. Keeps everything off the floor and looking sharp. $30-150.
2
Quality cue set - At least 4 house cues (2 for 8-ball teams). 58" standard, plus 2 short cues (48") if any wall is tight. $15-40 per cue.
3
Ball set - Aramith is the gold standard. A premium set runs $80-200 and lasts decades. Budget sets work fine for casual play ($30-50). Browse our accessories.
4
Table cover - Protects the felt from dust, spills, and UV fading. Non-negotiable if your table is near windows. $30-80.
5
Table brush - Brush the felt before every session. Removes chalk dust and keeps the cloth playing fast. $10-20.
6
Chalk - Master chalk is $5 for a box of 12. Kamui or Taom if you want premium ($15-30 per cube). Keep chalk cups on the table rails to prevent felt stains.

Step 5: Seating & Spectator Space

The best game rooms are social spaces. You need places for people to sit, eat, drink, and watch without getting in the way of the game.

  • High-top bar stools: Place them along the wall(s) with the most cue clearance. Spectators can lean against the wall and watch without blocking shots.
  • Bar or counter: Even a simple bar cart or narrow console table against one wall gives people a place to set drinks. Keep beverages away from the playing surface.
  • Scoreboard: A simple wall-mounted chalkboard or whiteboard. Makes every game feel official. $15-30.

Step 6: Sound & Entertainment

Music transforms a game room from a room with a table to a destination. You don't need a crazy sound system:

  • Bluetooth speaker ($30-200): A single quality speaker is all most rooms need. Sonos, JBL, or Marshall make great options.
  • Wall-mounted TV: Great for sports nights, but position it where it won't distract players or catch glare on the table. Behind the foot of the table is ideal.
  • Dart board: Classic complement to a pool table. Hang it on the wall with the most clearance from the table. Soft-tip is safer around nice furniture.

Step 7: Style & Atmosphere

This is where personality comes in. A few ideas from the best game rooms I've installed tables in:

  • Neon signs: A classic "BILLIARDS" neon or a custom sign with your family name. Instant character.
  • Dark paint: Navy, charcoal, or forest green walls create an intimate feel and make the table pop. Paint is the cheapest high-impact upgrade.
  • Framed prints: Vintage billiard posters, classic movie stills (The Color of Money, The Hustler), or local art.
  • Felt color as accent: Match your felt color to the room's accent color. We offer 20+ felt colors so you can coordinate perfectly.

Budget Breakdown

Here's what a complete game room setup costs in 2026:

Item Budget Premium
Used slate table (delivered + installed)$1,200$3,000
Table light$50$400
Cue rack + 4 cues$80$300
Ball set + accessories$60$250
Table cover$30$80
Seating (2-4 stools)$100$400
Decor (paint, signs, art)$50$500
Total~$1,570~$4,930

For under $2,000, you can have a complete game room with a quality slate table that plays like new. That's less than most people spend on a couch. And I promise you: people will spend more time around the pool table.

Ready to build your game room?

Start with the table. We'll handle delivery, installation, and leveling across all of Southern California.