I’m not a euromillion player, but during the covid I had to do about twenty (and more for others) flashes by going to play my grandmother’s numbers and I realized that almost all the tickets had consecutive numbers in fact the only time I had a grid that did not follow is when I took 3 flashes on 1 ticket.
And quite often the numbers follow each other more than once with the stars also following one another, I even had a grid where the numbers were followed 3 times with the stars. For example my last grid (3, 11,29,48> 49/6 ☆> 7 ☆.
So I totally don’t think it’s something that can’t happen, but from there to what happens every time, it’s curious anyway.
So I saw articles on the internet from journalists who know as much about math as I do, saying that in theory grids with sequences are as lucky as any other grid. But in practice when we look at the grids which fall most of the time the numbers do not follow one another, occasionally it happens and the vast majority of times when it does happen it is the stars following one another.
I did some code and I know that random numbers don’t exist in computer science, it’s an algorithm and it seems pretty clear to me that the algorithm causes these sequences, how? Why? Who checks the code they use? Why not be transparent and make the code public?
The pragmatist in me says it’s a way to increase the chances of having small gains so as to give that little something that makes people addicted. The conspirator thinks that there is an ass fuck in the rock, that if the numbers were ‘more’ random there would be several winners every month and that the jackpot would never reach the astronomical sums that push people who do not gamble. to play.
What do you think? Does it happen to you too? I mentioned it to my uncle who plays a lot, he thinks it’s rubbish but he never looks at the numbers, he just has them checked by the machine.
–