I know what I am about to show you may be visual overload for some - and I'm sorry.
But follow along as best as you can. I will try to be detailed. But I most certainly discovered
something that you can use to your advantage.
Below is a graph, that holds Sums (Green), Base Root (Red) and Root Sums (Blue). But as I had
these on the graph on my site, I noticed something. I found it to be funny how there was almost
a way they "fit" together based on their lines. So this morning, I decided to download a few screen
shots and merge them together so that they do fit. The dates on this graph all still line up as they should,
and this is the result of how the lines on the graph line up.
Remember, I said Red, Green and Blue... But notice how there are "Brown" lines? That's because
those shades mixed together make Brown. And brown is where we put our focus on.
The first thing to notice is, when a "brown" begins, most of the time, it then continues for 2 to 5 draws.
That by itself is important to take note of, that's a pattern.
Now you may be asking, how do I know what I am looking at for numbers? Well, there's no dates on this
chart and there's no numbers. But, I am going to give you a working example. Go to the right of this chart
and start at the last red arrow and go back 3 arrows. That will give you this
This chart is from the Tri-State Lottery (NH, ME, VT) but the example applies all across the country.
Now, tracking those back to numbers, it was 12/28 day, 12/28 night, and 12/29 day.
Now if we were to look at those numbers in a draw table along with this Sum, Base Root and Root Sums
2023-12-29 day |
585 |
18 |
8 |
9 |
2023-12-28 nite |
447 |
15 |
5 |
6 |
2023-12-28 day |
429 |
15 |
5 |
6 |
We can see that the Sum (in yellow) and the Base Root (in blue) have something
in common. And that is that the Sum is the Base Root + 10. (5 + 10 = 15) or (8 + 10 = 18)
Now, let's look at the chart again
The arrow on the left is 12/28 day, where Base Root is 5 and Sum is 15.
The next arrow is 12/28 night, where the Base Root is 5 and the Sum is 15
And the last arrow on the right is 12/29 day where the Base Root is 8 and the Sum is 18.
But they all create a "brown line".
Again, you may be saying, that's fine and dandy but it doesn't give me a number.
You're right but this can most certainly direct you towards a number. Here's how.
Watch for a number that comes out that has a Sum and Base Root to be 10 apart.
Once it hits, determine where it is on a scale of 2 to 9. If it's a lower number, you can
presume that it's going to go up so pick any numbers that hold a higher Base Root
and the Sum is +10. Remember, there are only so many numbers out of 1,000, that
are a 3 digit number and the Sum equals 16 for example.
Again in the example chart below, history shows that once it begins, it's going to
continue anywhere from 2 to 5 draws! You can catch the wave as it rides through.
Once it starts, you have 2 to 5 draws to catch it. Use your other ways to help you as well,
but pick numbers that have a Base Root from 2 to 9 and the Sum is +10. And one of the
other helpful tricks is, each state has it's own set of numbers that it uses over the past
12 months worth of data based on each sum/base root.
For example, the Tri-State over the past 12 months when using the following:
Sum: 15
Base: 5
Root: 6
Only has these numbers:
14 Numbers To Play: 447, 942, 087, 834, 546, 267, 159, 177, 852, 186, 960, 555, 573, 663
14 numbers out of 1,000 isn't bad to play at all ;)
You probably think I'm crazy... or am I?