The colours have the following value
Yellow - 2
Green - 3
Brown - 4
Blue - 5
Pink - 6
Black - 7
The last red has to be potted before starting on the colours.
27 is the value of the colours potted in order without missing one.
The highest score is normally considered as 147 (potting all 15 reds followed by a black on every red and then the colours) but it is possible to score more than this if your first shot is due to a foul by your opponent.
There are 147 points on a snooker table, except fouls pionts.
The green ball is worth three points in snooker.
The blue ball is worth 5 points in snooker.
there are no points in a billiards game. Do you by any chance reffer to pocketing two red balls at the same shot in a SNOOKER game? In that case you get two points and an extra shot.
Whoever wins the most points in a frame (1 game) & frames in a match.
There are no grey balls in a standard game of snooker.
Yes, snooker is played inside.
As the game would finish level, the black would be re-spotted and the person to pot it first wins.
A snooker game can be played in several bars, clubs, arcade halls and in snooker halls. Snooker is a variation of billiard other variations are poolbilliard and carambolage.
The problem with answering this question is that the transition from Billiard to Snooker is a gradual one - so whilst games existed with less than six balls it is unclear whether we can call this snooker. In its earliest form Snooker was a combination of two Pool type games - Life Pool and Pyramid Pool. The red balls come from pyramid pool, and the first colour, the black ball, from life pool. Three other colours were added a little later, the set being completed with the introduction of the brown and blue. The inclusion of these initial colours was first proposed in 1875 - dates for the inclusion of the brown and blue are unknown. It is unclear how well received or widespread these initial alterations were, but by 1882 the rules were standardised for a new game known as Snooker, with all six coloured balls included. One notable exception to the regular 6 coloured balls is Snooker Plus, a variation of the six-ball game invented by World Championship winner Joe Davis. The game introduced an orange ball (worth eight points) and a purple ball (worth ten points), to make a total of eight coloured balls, in an attempt to reinvigorate the game. However, the concept didn't catch on and Snooker Plus is now widely obsolete
1 point, unless you were supposed to be aiming for a coloured ball, in which case the opponent receives 4 points as a penalty.
15 red snooker balls.