Personally, for me it would come down to performance first, then any other eye candy. Two stories from me.
In 1992, Resin came out, and everyone flocked to either the Brunswick Rhino Pro, Nu-Line's Excalibur, or Ebonite's Turbo X. I went with the latter two, mainly based on how they performed on the lane, then the colour. Those wiped the pants off of my Blue and Blue Pearl Hammers. Then roughly 9 months later, everyone flocked to Ebonite's Crush/R. I didn't. The ball performed nice, but I didn't like the colour. It just wasn't me. Since then, Storm came out with both Sun Storms (one of which was the same colour as the Crush/R), 2 different Rhino Pros, The Rhino RE, and Columbia's Beast all came out. None of them appealed to me as far as performance or look went. Then Ebonite brought out the Nitro/R. That colour popped, and the performance on that ball sold me on it.
Same thing pretty much with Columbia's Pearl Quake and Blue Pearl Pulse. The latter reminded me of the colours of my Blue Pearl Hammer, so I ended up buying that one more for colour. Should have known better, but I did, and it still worked for me.
That was 1996/1997. Fast forward 4 years. Looked at Columbia's Tour Boss. Liked the blue colour, but didn't perform well. Zones didn't appeal to me. Ebonite's Omega looked terrible. Matrix was meh.. Apex was meh. they just didn't perform as well as I was needing for my game.
Then the Optyx came out. That brought back the eye candy that the Gold Rhino Pro and Pearl Quake had, and hit like a truck. Picked that up immediately. Same with the TPC Warrior. Loved the colouring on it, and it performed unbelievably well. Still have those two in a couple of my joeys to this day.
So for me, it isn't name. Case in point: Mission X. Didn't work well at all. Pursuit and Pursuit S.. not good at all. Nice colours, but not good. If the ball performs well, it gets my attention. If it performs well enough for my game, I'll get it. I get cocky if it performs well, goes great with my game, and is eye candy to top it off.
Me too . . but it's easier to read ball reaction without all the distractions. If you've got swirly colors and grips flying everywhere, you could miss the little jump or wiggle at 30 feet and pay for it next time . .
The only thing I can say that argues the other side of this, is that if someone is looking for ball motion in relation to where their grips are down the lane, tilt, etc., having grips that you can see could help. But my limit with that is to at least make the grips the same colour as the lettering of the logo or name on the ball. I mean, at least have some sense of aesthetics!
BL.