الأحد، 16 يوليو 2017

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السبت، 15 يوليو 2017

8 BALL POOL REWARD LINKS // FREE COINS AND FREE 2 SPIN // MARCH 2018

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What is 8 Ball Pool?

8 Ball Poll is an 8 ball game developed by Miniclip.com A multiplayer game known around the world, it makes the rounds of smartphones and computers. Needing a lot of strategies and reflection, it is a fun game that can not get tired of. Moreover, it is a sacred best game of billiards on mobile by the gamer. Like the classic billiards game, the goal is to get the eight balls into the holes. This is where you earn points and you can progress in level.



Download 8 Ball Pool by Miniclip from:

Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.miniclip.eightballpool&hl=en
App Store: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/8-ball-pool/id543186831?mt=8

السبت، 8 يوليو 2017

GET 2 LINKS FREE COINS 8 BALL POOL 2017 - مجاني

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Eight-ball (often spelled 8-ball or eightball, and sometimes called solids and stripes, spots and stripes in the UK[1] or, more rarely, bigs and littles/smalls, highs and lows, halves and wholes) is a poolgame popular in much of the world, and the subject of international professional and amateur competition. Played on a pool table with six pockets, the game is so universally known in some countries that beginners are often unaware of other pool games and believe the word "pool" itself refers to eight-ball. The game has numerous variations, mostly regional. Standard eight-ball is the second most competitive professional pool game, after nine-ball, and for the last several decades ahead of straight pool.

Eight-ball is played with cue sticks and 16 balls: a cue ball, and 15 object balls consisting of seven striped balls, seven solid-colored balls and the black 8 ball. After the balls are scattered with a break shot, the players are assigned either the group of solid balls or the stripes once a ball from a particular group is legally pocketed. The ultimate object of the game is to legally pocket the eight ball in a called pocket, which can only be done after all of the balls from a player's assigned group have been cleared from the table.
The game of eight-balls is derived from an earlier game invented around 1900 (first recorded in 1908) in the United States and initially popularized under the name "B.B.C. Co. Pool" (a name that was still in use as late as 1925) by the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Company. This forerunner game was played with seven yellow and seven red balls, a black ball, and the cue ball. Today, numbered stripes and solids are preferred in most of the world, though the British-style offshoot, blackball, uses the traditional colors (as did early televised "casino" tournaments in the U.S.). The game had relatively simple rules compared to today and was not added (under any name) to an official rule book (i.e., one published by a national or international sport governing body) until 1940.[2]:24, 89–90[3][4][5]

In 2017 a New Zealand 8-Ball player, Ethon Field (E.T), managed to break and then clear a frame of pool, winning the frame without giving his opponent a shot.
American-style eight-ball rules are played around the world by professionals, and in many amateur leagues. Nevertheless, the rules for eight-ball may be the most contested of any billiard game. There are several competing sets of "official" rules. The non-profit World Pool-Billiard Association (WPA) – with national affiliates around the world, some of which long pre-date the WPA, such as the Billiard Congress of America (BCA) – promulgates standardized rules as Pool Billiards – The Rules of Play[6] for amateur and professional play.

Meanwhile, many amateur leagues, such as the American Poolplayers Association (APA) / Canadian Poolplayers Association (CPA), the Valley National Eight-ball Association (VNEA, international in scope despite its historic name), and the BCA Pool League (BCAPL), use their own rulesets (most of them at least loosely based on the WPA/BCA version), while millions of individuals play informally using colloquial rules which vary not only from area to area but even from venue to venue ("house rules").

A summary of the international rules follows (see the WPA/BCA or other leagues' published rules, which conflict on minor points, for more details).
The table's playing surface is approximately 9 by 4.5 ft (2.7 by 1.4 m) (regulation size), though some leagues and tournaments using the World Standardized Rules may allow smaller sizes, down to 7 by 3.5 ft (2.1 by 1.1 m), and early-20th-century 10 by 5 ft (3.0 by 1.5 m) models are occasionally also used. WPA professional competition is generally on regulation tables, while the amateur league championships of various leagues, including ACS, BCAPL, VNEA, and APA, use the 7-foot tables, to fit hundreds of them into the hosting venue.

There are seven solid-colored balls numbered 1 through 7, seven striped balls numbered 9 through 15, an 8 ball, and a cue ball. The balls are usually colored as follows:

1 and 9: yellow
2 and 10: blue
3 and 11: red
4 and 12: purple (TV: pink)1
5 and 13: orange
6 and 14: green
7 and 15: brown (TV: tan)1
8: black
Cue: white
1Special sets designed to be more easily discernible on television substitute a rather light tan shade for the normally darker brown of the 7 and 15 balls, and pink for the dark purple of the 4 and 12; these alternative-color sets are now also available to consumers.

To start the game, the object balls are placed in a triangular rack. The base of the rack is parallel to the end rail (the short end of the pool table) and positioned so the apex ball of the rack is located on the foot spot. The balls in the rack are ideally placed so that they are all in contact with one another; this is accomplished by pressing the balls together from the back of the rack toward the apex ball. The order of the balls should be random, with the exceptions of the 8 ball, which must be placed in the center of the rack (i.e., the middle of the third row), and the two back corner balls one of which must be a stripe and the other a solid. The cue ball is placed anywhere the breaker desires inside the kitchen.
Once the table changes the player may only have 15 seconds to make their move. One person is chosen (by a predetermined method, e.g., coin flip, win or loss of previous game, or lag) to shoot first, using the cue ball to break the object-ball rack apart. If the shooter who breaks fails to make a legal break (usually defined as at least four balls hitting cushions or an object ball being pocketed), then the opponent can call for a re-rack and become the breaker, or elect to play from the current position of the balls.


Long-exposure photograph of a break in eight-ball
According to World Standardized Rules, if the 8 ball is pocketed on the break without fouling, it is an automatic win for the player taking the shot. If the breaker scratches (pockets the cue ball) while pocketing the 8 ball on the break, the incoming player may call for a re-rack and break, or have the 8 ball spotted and begin shooting with ball-in-hand behind the head string, with the balls as they lie. (For regional amateur variations, such as pocketing the 8 on the break being an instant win or loss,

A player (or team) will continue to shoot until committing a foul, or failing to legally pocket an object ball (whether intentionally or not). Thereupon it is the turn of the opposing player(s). Play alternates in this manner for the remainder of the game. Following a foul, the incoming player has ball-in-hand anywhere on the table, unless the foul occurred on the break shot, as noted previously.
At some point in the game, one of the players can select balls 1–7 (the "solids") or balls 9–15 (the "stripes") as their group of object balls by legally pocketing a ball from one category. The other player is assigned to the other group. Balls pocketed on the break shot are not used to assign the target groups. Once the target groups have been assigned, they remain fixed throughout the remainder of the game.

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