User talk:Wikipedia12345671234567

Loop is a form of billiards played on an elliptical pool table.

=Rules, objective, and gameplay=

Equipment
Loop is played with four billiards balls; one of one color, another of a different color, a black ball, and a cue ball. It is played on an elliptical pool table, and pool cues are used to hit the white cue ball. The hole is one focus point, while the starting point of the black ball is the other.

Objective
The objective of loop is to get the ball of color, which you decided and announced at the beginning of the game to go after, into the hole. After doing that, one must get the black ball into the hole. This is done in the same fashion as in pool; one must use a pool cue to hit the white cue ball into the desired ball.

All other rules are the same as billiards. =Gameplay=

=First game= The first and, as of July 16, 2015, only recorded game of loop was played on July 16, 2015, in London, UK, by mathematician Alex Bellos and Brady Haran of Numberphile, Sixty Symbles, and more's nephew. Brady's Nephew won. The table's eccentricity was 0.43.

That game was recorded and published on the YouTube channel | "Numberphile", a channel featuring famous mathematicians explaining cool math phenomena.

=External links= | Loop official website

| Numberphile website

| Numberphile on YouTube

Help me!
Please help me with turning my draft into an actual independent article.

Wikipedia12345671234567 (talk) 19:16, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
 * , you seem to have tried creating a draft on your talk page, which isn't the proper place to do it. Please use the Article Wizard to create your draft and submit it for review. If you want more help, stop by the Teahouse, Wikipedia's live help channel, or the help desk to ask someone for assistance. Primefac (talk) 19:26, 20 August 2015 (UTC)

Thank you, but I think I'll just leave this code and info for others to make a page out of. I don't think in ready to make my own page. 19:30, 20 August 2015 (UTC)