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#1: Initial revision by user avatar Olin Lathrop‭ · 2023-08-25T13:07:00Z (about 1 year ago)
<blockquote>I prefer to pick integers &ge;32 to boost my probability of winning</blockquote>

That's silly.

All combinations of numbers have the same chance of winning.

<hr>

<b>&lt;Soapbox&gt;</b>

You've asked a bunch of questions here that indicate you are trying to find a scheme to win the lottery.  There isn't one.  On average, you're going to lose.  The purpose of a lottery is not to redistribute wealth, but to be a source of income to the government.  Since they are making money from it, on average, the lottery players must be losing.

The lottery is basically a voluntary tax.  Actually it's a stupidity tax, or a tax on those who didn't pay attention in high school math class.

These lotteries are big enough that they can hire smart people who clearly know lots more math than you do.  These folks probably have a degree in actuarial math.  You're not going to out-math them.  They make sure there aren't loopholes that let a player gain an advantage over all the other players.  That's their job.

Then there are the lottery marketing people who know that humans are bad at statistics when looking at situations intuitively, and even worse when getting emotionally involved.  Lotteries are therefore promoted on emotional grounds.  Targeting dumb people helps spending the marketing dollars more effectively.  Looks like its working.

Normally I don't say this because I like other people paying my taxes for me, but since this is the math site: <i>"Don't be an idiot by playing the lottery.".</i>

<b>&lt;/Soapbox&gt;</b>