If the technology of the lanes, pins, and oils were advancing at the rate of the bowling balls, we could have a very different game now, especially in terms of the balls used.
Imagine if we were to have different surfaces of lanes to bowl on, almost like Tennis courts or golf courses. With each lane being able to "oil" itself with a polymer that was cheaper than lane oil to use, but lasted 5x longer. Imagine if we had pins, that while they still met the same weight restrictions, the pin had dynamic inner weights which make them harder to fall unless the ball was coming in at the absolute right angle. Between the computer aided technology in the lane itself, working in conjunction with a software that was able to show you CATS data of your shot after every shot.
The game can only evolve past the field that it's being played on. That's why ball technology hasn't changed much. There's still centers all across the country where you can barely keep a resin ball in play because the center only puts out a "head run" of oil to save money.
The sad part is, bowlers wouldn't accept the leap forward if it resulted in their average dropping 10-20 pins.
I remember watching Brian Voss throw the first prototypes for the Epoxy shell, which later turned out to be the Columbia EPX T1. He had 4 test balls, all different strengths of Epoxy. They put out a heavy oil 45ft pattern on the left lane, then the same pattern on right lane, but with an even heavier volume of oil (Not sure, but I know it was 100+ML in volume). The demo was amazing. The standard particle balls of the time did not hook on the right lane, and only hooked enough to barely clip the 3-6 on the left lane. The heaviest oil balls from San Antonio (the old Columbia plant) barely wrinkled on the patterns. There was one dull red epoxy ball with a dynamic core that hooked off of the lane a little past the arrows on the left lane no matter what. Then there was that same cover on a pancake block that got better length on the left lane, but still hooked way too much for the left lane to be playable. Then he threw those balls on the right lane where nothing hooked and both of those balls gave a big hooking, strong rolling reaction on the flood on the right lane. Those prototypes were on the "extreme side" of what the technology could do at the time. Then they had two other prototype Epoxy shell balls that hooked like crazy on the left lane, but were still playable and they still had enough dig for BV to play a tight down and in line to the pocket on the flood and still hook.
The way those Epoxy shells ate up oil was way too strong for anything in the early 2000s. On todays oils, they might give that strong particle type roll, but that reaction is very niche and may not create the optimal angle for carry. San Antonio lost millions on the development of that cover.
If the lanes and oils were to advance as much as the balls from plastic->resin, we would have a every different looking game now.