You do not need a literal measuring ruler. The most effective tool is a "Angle Guide Card."

Not all rulers are created equal. To make the "mini ruler 8 ball pool better" experience optimal, seek these features:

Avoid: Wooden rulers (opaque, thick), metal rulers (scratch risk, cold), flexible rulers (bend, inaccurate).

Bank shots (off one cushion) are where amateurs lose to pros. Using a mini ruler, you can employ the mirror method:

The Mini Ruler’s greatness lies not in its rarity, but in its philosophy. In a game increasingly monetized around instant gratification, the Mini Ruler represents a return to fundamentals. It offers a balanced statistical profile, a psychological advantage through modesty, and most importantly, it demands skill improvement over equipment dependency. For the player who seeks to truly understand the physics of 8 Ball Pool—to feel the difference between a stun shot and a stop shot, to calculate position rather than pray for it—the Mini Ruler is not just a good choice; it is the superior one. It proves that in digital billiards, as in life, the player makes the cue, not the other way around.

You might ask: "Why not use a full-sized 12-inch ruler?" The answer lies in physics and UI.

If you actually meant the game Mini Militia, the term "better" usually refers to "God Mod" or hacks.