Which is part of a funny conversation me and my brother have had before.
Is a pearl really a pearl?
The thought was for so long a "pearlized" ball had the distinct color difference and swirl design if you will in the coverstock versus the plain solid look of the counter parts.
Then in the early 2000's you started seeing "solid" coverstock bowling balls with that same feature of the swirled pearl design, and "pearlized" coverstocks that looked very "solid".
Then when "hybrids" came out with the mix of each it made a light come on to the marketing and how funny it really was.
Just something I found interesting from a conversation years ago.