If you want, I can:

The phrase "trgalacom 8 ball pool repack" sounds like a sketchy, unofficial download from an old forum — likely a compressed, cracked version of 8 Ball Pool with a suspicious installer. Here’s a short story based on that vibe:


Title: The Repack

Marco found it at 2 a.m. on a thread with no replies: "trgalacom 8 ball pool repack — full cues, unlimited coins, no survey."

His real account had gone broke after a losing streak. One click wouldn’t hurt.

The file was 47 MB — too small. But the repack had a weird icon, a green pool ball with a crack through it. The installer ran in a language that looked like Russian but with typos. He unchecked the toolbar offers, skipped the “trgalacom optimizer,” and hit Finish.

The game opened. It looked right — the felt, the cue, the break. He won his first match. 10 million coins added. Then his cursor moved on its own. The chat box typed: “thanks for the install, marco.”

He yanked the mouse cord. The game minimized. A terminal window opened, flashing commands:

trgalacom@8ballrepack> user_pool breached. deploying: cue_lock.exe

His screen flickered. His webcam light turned on. In the corner of the mirror, he saw a reflection that didn’t move when he did — just the faint outline of someone lining up a shot.

The next morning, his bank called about four international transfers to a “TRG HOLDINGS.” His desktop background was a single message:

“You lose. Play again for 100 credits?”

Below it: [YES] [YES] — both buttons highlighted.


The repacking scene is unregulated. While "trgalacom" has a reputation in some circles, clones of their work are rampant. Fake trgalacom repacks have been found to contain:

Short answer: No.

Long answer: The trgalacom 8 ball pool repack represents the "forbidden fruit" of mobile gaming. It promises instant gratification—unlimited power and cosmetics. However, the cost is potentially your device’s security, your Facebook account, and your time (due to inevitable bans).

If you are simply curious about the mechanics of a modded game, consider using a completely isolated device (an old tablet with no personal data) and a burner Facebook account. Never use your real profile.

For the vast majority of players, the fleeting thrill of a 99-million coin balance is not worth the headache of malware removal or a permanent IP ban from a game they enjoy.