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Summary for this view:
Analyzed 100 most recent draws. Showing latest 100.
This highlights number “teams” that keep showing up together in real draws. We scan the archive for pairs, triples, and larger clusters that repeat at least three times, then surface the most consistent ones. Each line below shows a past draw where **two or more numbers from that team landed together** — a quick way to see the pattern in context. Use these as grounded building blocks: they don’t predict outcomes, but they *do* reflect how this game tends to group numbers when it hits.
These are the most active numbers in your recent window. “Hot” doesn’t mean *better* — it simply means they’ve been present more often lately. If you want your picks to mirror current archive movement, start by blending one or two of these with steadier, long-term numbers.
- #03 (4)
- #11 (3)
- #30 (3)
- #31 (3)
- #14 (2)
These numbers haven’t appeared in the last 30 draws. Cold doesn’t imply obligation or timing — it just shows which parts of the pool have been quiet. Including a couple can widen coverage and keep your sets from clustering around only what’s been visible recently.
Skip is simply “how many draws since we last saw a number.” This list shows numbers whose current skip is **above the game’s average skip** in your analysis window. Think of it as a balance tool: pairing a couple overdue numbers with a couple recent ones often creates sets that feel closer to real archive structure.
Average skip: 6 draws
Numbers: 02, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 15, 17, 22, 23, 25, 32, 36
Momentum compresses three signals into one clean score: **how often a number shows up long-term, how active it is recently, and how fresh its last appearance was.** Higher momentum means the number is supported by both history *and* recent movement. If you want a fast, grounded shortlist without over-tuning, this is the one to trust.
- #03 — Momentum: 95
- #11 — Momentum: 87
- #30 — Momentum: 86
- #31 — Momentum: 79
- #26 — Momentum: 74
Every draw has a “width.” Some results cluster tightly; others stretch across the board. **Spread** measures that width: the highest main number minus the lowest main number in the draw.
Typical spread band (middle 50% of draws in this window): 21–32
About 55% of analyzed draws fall inside this band.
Last draw spread: 37 (outside typical band)
Some numbers show a quiet tendency to arrive together more often than random mixing would suggest. These top pairs are the most consistent co-travelers among the archive’s most active numbers. Treat them as natural companions — useful anchors when you want sets that resemble real draw behavior.
- #16 & #35 — Together in 5 draws (5% of analyzed draws)
- #11 & #18 — Together in 4 draws (4% of analyzed draws)
- #11 & #26 — Together in 4 draws (4% of analyzed draws)
- #18 & #26 — Together in 4 draws (4% of analyzed draws)
- #05 & #35 — Together in 4 draws (4% of analyzed draws)
This checks whether the game’s behavior is holding steady or shifting. We compare the recent window to an earlier slice of the archive and measure how much each number’s presence changed. The stability score summarizes the overall calmness of the distribution — higher means patterns have been more consistent.
Overall stability: 100/100 (higher means more stable)
Most volatile numbers (largest change between windows):
- #01 — Volatility index: 0
- #02 — Volatility index: 0
- #03 — Volatility index: 0
- #04 — Volatility index: 0
- #05 — Volatility index: 0
Rhythm looks at the spacing between hits for each number. Numbers with a high rhythm index tend to reappear on a steadier cadence, while low-rhythm numbers are more erratic. This is not a promise — it’s a behavioral profile. Use rhythmic numbers when you want sets shaped like the archive’s natural tempo.
- #33 — Rhythm index: 100, typical cycle: 7 draws
- #26 — Rhythm index: 90, typical cycle: 6 draws
- #30 — Rhythm index: 89, typical cycle: 6 draws
- #35 — Rhythm index: 87, typical cycle: 5 draws
- #17 — Rhythm index: 85, typical cycle: 6 draws
How to read these insights (and what to do with them):
This page is a clear map of how this game behaves in real life.
It does not claim certainty — that would be dishonest — but it *does* show the shapes, balances, and tendencies that appear again and again in the archive.
Your job is simple: build sets that resemble that truth.
Frequency — long-term backbone.
Frequency answers: “Which numbers live in this archive the most?”
Use it as a realism anchor. A set that ignores long-term presence is usually out of character for the game.
Hot numbers — recent activity.
These are the numbers showing up most in the latest window.
They’re not special — just currently active.
Use one or two if you want your set to reflect the game’s present rhythm.
Cold numbers — quiet zones.
Cold numbers haven’t shown up in the recent slice.
Cold does not mean “due.” It means “absent lately.”
Add a couple if you want broader coverage beyond what’s been visible.
Skip / Overdue — waiting time.
Skip is “draws since last seen.”
Overdue numbers sit above the game’s average skip right now.
Use skip to balance mood: some recent, some waiting — not all the same temperament.
Momentum — a single, blended signal.
Momentum merges long-term frequency, recent hits, and recency into one stable score.
High momentum numbers are supported by both history and current movement.
If you want a quick, grounded shortlist, start here.
Partnerships (pairs) — natural companions.
Certain numbers appear together more often than others.
Think of these as consistent co-travelers in the archive.
Use pairs as smart anchors when shaping wheels or hand-building sets.
Top combinations — repeating number teams.
These are multi-number clusters that recur across the archive.
They don’t predict the future; they describe the game’s favorite groupings.
Start with one, then build variety around it.
Decades — balance across tens.
Decades show where winners tend to land by tens range (1–9, 10–19, 20–29…).
Real draws usually span multiple decades.
If your set sits inside one decade, it’s typically too narrow.
Endings — last-digit variety.
Endings reveal whether draws lean toward certain last digits.
Use this as a clustering check: too many identical endings often compress a set.
Unless you’re doing it intentionally, aim for diverse endings.
Rhythm & hit cycles — the game’s tempo.
Rhythm measures how regularly a number tends to reappear.
A higher rhythm index means steadier cadence; lower means erratic behavior.
Use rhythmic numbers when you want sets shaped like the archive’s natural timing.
Volatility & Stability — calm vs. shifting behavior.
Volatility flags numbers whose presence changed sharply between windows.
Stability summarizes whether the distribution is steady overall.
When stability is high, archive-shaped picking is more consistent.
When volatility rises, favor balanced structure over bold concentration.
Spread (range) — the width of real draws.
Spread is the highest main number minus the lowest.
We calculate a typical band from your archive window — the middle zone where most draws live.
Use spread like an authenticity check, alongside odd/even and low/high.
Stay in the band most of the time; go tight or wide only when you mean to.
Bottom line:
You are not chasing folklore.
You are shaping sets that reflect how this game truly behaves.