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Prizes are significantly lower than 1+3D, the top prize being RM660 for Big First place. Their 1+3D follows the same structure as the Magnum 4D. Dà Mǎ Cǎi also have 3D and 1+3D Jackpot Games. The latest product introduced from Dà Mǎ Cǎi is Dà Mǎ Cǎi Jackpot in January 2014 with a minimum payout of 1.8 million for Jackpot 1.
†The overall odds when the game first began was 1 in 2,846.367 as the first few drawings did not have a 4/7 prize. On April 10, 1991, the game's format was changed, with 10 numbers drawn instead of 11 and 74 numbers to choose from instead of 80.
"Win for Life" was retired following the September 13, 2014 drawing; it was replaced by $1,000,000 Moneyball, a Virginia-only game since replaced by Bank a Million. In Win for Life, players chose six numbers from 1 through 42; seven numbers were drawn, including the "Free Ball". Top prize was $1000-per-week; there was a cash option of $1 ...
In a typical 6/49 game, each player chooses six distinct numbers from a range of 1–49. If the six numbers on a ticket match the numbers drawn by the lottery, the ticket holder is a jackpot winner—regardless of the order of the numbers. The probability of this happening is 1 in 13,983,816.
The numbers are based on a $50 a square game, with a $625 payout for the 1st and 3rd quarters, a $1,250 payout for halftime, and a $2,500 payout for the end of the game.
Beginning with the May 14, 2019 draw, the field of numbers increased from 49 to 50 (changing the odds of a jackpot win to 1 in 33 million), the main jackpot cap was increased to $70 million, new prizes were added for matching 4 or 5 numbers and the bonus number, and the game added a second weekly draw on Tuesdays.
Initiated in 1990, Keno! players select 10 numbers out of 80. During the daily drawings, 22 numbers are chosen. A player matching 10 numbers wins $250,000. Players also win money by matching 9, 8, 7, or 6 numbers. There also is a prize for matching zero numbers, which is a $1 scratch ticket (rather than a free Keno! play). Keno! results are ...
The drawing used one machine with 5 bingo cages(the first cage loaded with the B numbers, the second with the I numbers, and so on). Players had to match all five bingo numbers in the exact order to win a prize. There were prizes for matching 2, 3, or 4 numbers in the exact order. The prize structure for the game was unknown.