Games out is the number of games a lotto number has skipped since the last hit.
Skips of up to FIVE games out are the most significant.
For our example, we have the following drawing history side by side with the games
out for each number in the drawing:
DRAWINGS GAMES OUT
May 1: 07-10-14-20-21 03-02-03-11-00
May 2: 03-15-27-30-32 05-03-20-06-07
May 3: 01-10-11-19-30 09-01-08-15-00
May 4: 02-06-14-15-17 05-10-02-01-08
May 5: 01-06-20-25-29 01-00-03-06-12
The games out listings for the first 2 drawings here cannot be explained because
the previous drawings are not shown here, so don't be confused about those.
Starting at the May 3 drawing, we can see that number 10 is 1 game out because it
hit May 1, skipped May 2, and hit again May 3. It skipped a total of one games between
hits, so it is shown as 1 game out at the time of the May 3 drawing.
In the May 5 drawing, number 1 is 1 game out because it hit May 3,
skipped May 4, and hit again May 5. Number 6 hit back to back May 4 and May 5,
so after the May 5 drawing, number 6 is 0 games out because it did not skip any drawings
before hitting again. Number 20 hit May 1, skipped May 2, 3, and 4 (3 drawings), and hit
again May 5, so it is 3 games out.
Make a chart like the one below for your lottery. Write a GAMES OUT column
with the numbers 0 to 5. Look at just the last 5 drawings
like our example above. Count the number of 00's in the games out section,
the number of 1's, etc up to 5 and fill that out in the TOTAL column.
If any skip from 0 to 5 did not occur, play the Lotto numbers that are out
that many games.
GAMES OUT TOTAL
0 3
1 3
2 2
3 4
4 0
5 2
In this example, there have been no numbers with a games out of 4 that hit in the past
5 drawings, so it would be good to play those numbers which have been out 4 games.
In this example, numbers 7 and 21 would both be 4 games out if they hit the next drawing
because they hit May 1 but missed the four games after that drawing. These 2 numbers would
be good numbers to play for the May 6 drawing.