Voodoo cases occupy a specific corner of the cue-protection market that is hard to find anywhere else. The brand pulls from gothic, occult, and bayou-mystic visual cues, then translates them into hard-shell cases priced for working league players rather than collectors. If you have spent any time browsing pool cue cases on the site, the Voodoo lineup is the one you remember a week later, because nothing else looks quite like it.
This guide covers three Voodoo cases that map cleanly onto how most players actually carry their gear: a single-cue carry option, a standard two-cue tournament case, and a step-up two-cue case for players who want a bit more presence. All three sit in a price band that makes them easy to justify, especially when you compare them to the leather-and-custom side of the market.
What makes Voodoo cases different
Voodoo’s design language is unmistakable. You get black bases with high-contrast graphic inlays, hand-style stitching, and motifs pulled from voodoo and gothic iconography. Skulls, queens, gris-gris symbols, and ornamental crosses show up across the catalog. It is a brand identity, not a costume, and it sits well alongside the more conservative cases on the wall because the build quality matches the styling.
Construction-wise, every Voodoo case in this guide is a hard case with a textured exterior and an interior built to keep cues isolated. You get individual cylindrical pockets for the butt and shaft sections, padded enough to absorb knocks but rigid enough that nothing shifts in transit. The exteriors are a textured wrap rather than smooth vinyl, which hides scuffs better over time and gives the case a slightly tactile feel when you grab it.
Hardware is the other place where Voodoo punches above its price tier. Reinforced strap anchors, oversized zippers, and metal D-rings on the shoulder strap show up on cases that compete with smooth-vinyl options at twice the cost. For a league player who travels to events or just lugs the case in and out of a car several times a week, that hardware matters more than the styling does.
Three Voodoo cases worth your attention in 2026
Voodoo 1×1 Coffin Box Cue Case VODCOFA
The Voodoo 1×1 Coffin Box Cue Case VODCOFA is a perfect entry point at $170.10. The 1×1 layout means one butt slot and one shaft slot, so it carries a single two-piece cue end to end. The form factor is a coffin box rather than the typical cylindrical case, which gives you a flatter profile that lays neatly across a back seat or the floor of a car.
The coffin styling is on-brand for Voodoo and lands as either a serious aesthetic statement or a knowing wink, depending on the room. Either way, the box-shaped construction is genuinely practical: it sits flat on the floor next to the table without rolling, and the rigid panels protect the cue from impacts on every face. A top handle makes it easy to grab and go, and a removable shoulder strap is included for longer carries.
Voodoo 2×2 Papa Legba Stitch Hard Case VODC22D
Step up to the Voodoo 2×2 Papa Legba Stitch Hard Case VODC22D when you need to carry a playing cue plus a break cue, or when you want room for an extra shaft. At $197.10, this 2×2 layout (two butt slots, two shaft slots) is the standard tournament loadout for most league players, and the Papa Legba stitch design is one of the cleaner-looking options in the Voodoo catalog.
The Papa Legba stitching wraps the case in a graphic pattern that reads ornate without crossing into busy. Two front pockets, top and bottom, keep your chalk and tip tools in one place and your glove and joint protectors in the other. The padded shoulder strap is wide enough that it does not dig in even when the case is fully loaded, and the metal hardware on the strap anchors will outlast the case itself.
Voodoo 2×2 Hard Case VODC22F
If you want the same 2×2 capacity in a slightly different design, the Voodoo 2×2 Hard Case VODC22F at $197.10 is the alternative. Same two butts and two shafts of capacity, same hard-shell construction, same hardware grade, but with a different graphic treatment on the body panels. It is a way to get the protection and capacity you want with a look that suits your taste rather than picking based on stock alone.
The VODC22F leans slightly more restrained on the graphic side, which makes it the easier choice for players who want the Voodoo build quality and brand pricing without committing to one of the louder visual designs. The interior is identical to the Papa Legba model, with the same padded cylindrical pockets and the same level of impact protection. Pick whichever exterior you prefer; you are getting the same case underneath.
How to choose between them
Capacity is the first question. If you carry a single playing cue and that is the entire kit, the VODCOFA Coffin Box is the right answer and saves you the cost of cases with empty slots. If you carry a playing cue plus a break cue, or a playing cue plus a backup shaft, you need a 2×2 and either the VODC22D or VODC22F will do the job.
Between the two 2x2s, the choice comes down to design. The VODC22D Papa Legba is the more graphically detailed of the two and is the right pick if you want the case to be part of how people remember your setup. The VODC22F is the more neutral option in the Voodoo lineup, which is itself a relative statement, and works better if you want the Voodoo build quality without leaning all the way into the visual identity.
Pricing is consistent across both 2×2 cases at $197.10, so you are not paying a premium for one design over the other. The Coffin Box at $170.10 is the value pick of the three, and the lower price reflects the smaller capacity rather than any difference in build.
Whichever Voodoo case fits your loadout, you can browse current stock and pricing on the full Voodoo cases page at Quarter King Billiards. If a different brand or construction style is a better fit for what you carry, the broader pool cue cases category covers everything from soft cases to high-end leather builds across the lines we stock.