Fr Lottery Game

Posted onby
To win an amount of money in this scratch game the player has to find it three times under the scratch area.

Disclaimer: Information found on this website is believed to be accurate. If you have questions about the winning numbers, contact the Lottery at (781) 848-7755 or visit your nearest Lottery agent or Lottery office for the official winning numbers. You must be 21 years of age or older to play Video Lottery, Sports Lottery, Table Games and Internet Games. Designed to comply with the accessibility guidelines developed through the WAI and the Web Presentation Guidelines for State of Delaware Agencies. For winning numbers and other Delaware Lottery information, call 1-800-338-6200. Play the lottery from your phone! The lottery is a common game with numbers. Based on lucky guesses and winning odds, lotto games are a source of dreams and hopes all around the world. Any time one jackpots reaches a certain height, people rush in to buy lotto tickets online or offline, making plans of what they with do with the potentially won money. North Dakota only offers multi-jurisdictional games. This means that only games offered over several states are played in North Dakota. Powerball tickets first went on sale in 2004, with Mega Millions following in January 2010. For every dollar raised in lottery ticket.

A scratchcard (also called a scratch off, scratch ticket, scratcher, scratchum, scratchie, scritchies, scratch-it, scratch game, scratch-and-win, instant game or instant lottery in different places) is a small card, often made of thin paper-based card for competitions and plastic to conceal PINs, where one or more areas contain concealed information which can be revealed by scratching off an opaque covering.

Lottery

Applications include cards sold for gambling (especially lottery games and quizzes), free-of-charge cards for quizzes, fraudulent free cards encouraging calls to premium rate phone services, and to conceal confidential information such as PINs for telephone calling cards (otherwise known as recharge cards) and other prepaid services.

In some cases the entire scratchable area needs to be scratched to see whether a prize has been won—the card is printed either to be a winner or not—or to reveal the secret code; the result does not depend upon what portions are scratched off. In other cases, some but not all areas have to be scratched; this may apply in a quiz, where the area corresponding to the right answer is scratched, or in some gambling applications where, depending on which areas are scratched, the card wins or loses. In these cases the card becomes invalid if too many areas are scratched. After losing one can scratch all areas to see if, how, and what one could have won with this card.

Technology[edit]

The scratchcard itself is made of paper-based card, or plastic, with hidden information such as PIN or HRN (Hidden Recharge Number) printed on it, covered by an opaque substance (usually latex). The original cards were covered with an environmentally unsafe solvent based coating. In the late 1980s, adhesive specialist Jerome Greenfield invented a safe water-based coating still used in scratchers today that can be scratched off relatively easily, while resistant to normal abrasion. Other types of scratch panel are scratch labels, hot stamp foil or 'sandwich' label which are technologies that is easy to produce for manufacturers without specialised equipment for applying latex panels. Unlike silkscreen latex panels that bond with the card body, labels are distinctly separate to the card body and applied by adhesion which makes them prone to sophisticated and fraudulent manipulation.[1]

Gambling and quizzes[edit]

Origins[edit]

The original game tickets were produced using manual randomization techniques. In 1974 the American company Scientific Games Corporation led by scientist John Koza and retail promotions specialist Daniel Bower produced the first computer-generated instant lottery game.[2] In 1987, Astro-Med, Inc. of West Warwick, Rhode Island, received the U.S. Patent for the instant scratch-off lottery ticket.[3]

Simple prize scratchcards require the player, for example, to scratch off three (or more) areas hiding numbers, symbols, etc. If all the items revealed are the same, a prize has been won. More complicated scratchcards have several different ways to win on one card. Other scratchcards involve matching symbols, pictures or words, or are adaptations of popular (card-)games such as blackjack, poker or Monopoly. Games are also tied to popular themes such as Harley Davidson, Major League Baseball, NASCAR, the National Hockey League, Marvel Comics and FIFA World Cup.

There are currently two major manufacturers of game tickets: Scientific Games Corporation, with production facilities in the USA, Chile, UK, Germany, Canada, Brazil and Australia; and Pollard Banknote, with production facilities in the USA and Canada. There are several other smaller manufacturers in North America, Europe, and Asia.

Popularity[edit]

Scratchcards are a very popular form of gambling due to their low cost and the opportunity to win instantly, as opposed to waiting for a drawing like many lotteries. There is a trend[citation needed] towards more expensive scratchcards (20-50 USD) that have prizes in the millions of dollars. However, many such 'instant' tickets sold in the US, especially in Massachusetts and New York, do not pay top prizes 'instantly,' but rather over many years, with no cash option.

The popularity of lottery scratchcards has been increasing at a greater rate than any other form of lottery.[citation needed]

Predictability[edit]

In the 21st century there have been attempts to increase the odds on finding a prize-winning card based on statistics, by tracking the amount of prize money won and cards sold to calculate accurate current odds. There have been a number of instances where a series of cards are still available although all major prizes have been won. Some lotteries make this information available to all free of charge to help promote their games [4] Hypothetically, large early payouts may exceed ultimate sales before expiration of the game card series. However, the low odds of winning – typically from less than 1 in 5 to about 1 in 2.5 – and players who buy cards unaware of the low return offset these losses, so the lottery still makes a profit.

Second-chance sweepstakes[edit]

Many state lotteries also run a second-chance sweepstakes in conjunction with the retail sale of state lottery scratchcards in an effort to increase consumer demand for scratchcards and to help control the litter problems associated with the improper disposal of non-winning lottery tickets.[5] Since lottery tickets and scratchcards are considered in the United States to be bearer instruments under the Uniform Commercial Code,[citation needed] these scratchcard promotions can be entered with non-winning tickets that are picked up as litter.

Break opens[edit]

Break Opens, also known as breakopens, break open cards, strip tickets, pull-tabs, nevada tickets or in some Bingo Halls as 'pickles' are lottery or bingo cards on which there are concealed letters, numbers, or symbols that have been predetermined as winners. The cards are often made of cardboard and contain perforated cover window tabs, behind which the combinations are printed. The purchaser must 'break open' the card, or pull up the pull-tabs, to see the information printed within, and then must confirm with winning combinations printed on the back of the card, various cards may have come from the printer highlighted as winning under the tabs. The winning combination will be highlighted, making the identification of winning tickets easier.

Online gambling scratchcards[edit]

By around 2010 online versions of virtual 'scratchcard' (not physical cards) gambling games which utilized Macromedia Flash and Java to simulate scratching a card on a computer were available. Virtual cards could be bought, and prizes collected, over an Internet connection.[6]

Fraudulent practices[edit]

A widespread misuse of scratchcards is the free-of-charge distribution of cards offering a range of prizes, ranging from extremely low-value to very desirable; for example from time-limited discount vouchers redeemable only through a specified agent to cars. Cards always reveal that a prize has been won, but the nature and value of the prize can only be determined by phoning a premium rate telephone claim line costing a significant sum per minute. Calls to this number are designed by the promoter always to take several minutes, and the prize won is, in reality, always of far less value than the cost of the call, and usually not worth claiming. Regulatory authorities for telephone services have been taking action against such schemes, issuing warnings and large fines.[7]

Games sold with claimed jackpots[edit]

Over the years, many lotteries have continued to sell scratch games, while failing to disclose that the larger prizes or jackpot have already been claimed in order to discourage players from no longer playing a won scratch game, though before the 2000s and direct connections between the lottery and their sales terminals could be made, there was no expectation of this to be known. In February 2018 it was reported that some scratch cards in the UK are still sold even after the jackpots have already been won. Research by The Guardian newspaper found that the £250,000 Gold game, which advertises 15 top prizes worth a quarter of a million pounds each, were still being sold after all 15 jackpots had been claimed.[8]

This happened again in May 2018, in which the 20X Cash Scratchcard was still being sold after the last jackpot prize was claimed.[9] Many lotteries since the start of the 2010s have begun to have their retailers print out up-to-date game lists from their terminals daily or weekly (often with the force of state, provincial, or national law after consumer watchdog organizations or television station investigative units have exposed the practice), which note games where jackpots have already been won or which have large prizes left, along with up-to-date winners' lists on their websites.

Cards hiding confidential information[edit]

Scratchcards can also be used to distribute confidential information, without any element of chance or skill. A common example is the phone card or recharge card sold for a price which provides specified phone call usage. The card itself, unlike a credit card, has no function in itself; it is simply a vehicle to inform the purchaser confidentially of the PIN required to make the phone calls paid for.

Gallery[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^https://www.slideshare.net/NigelPageMIEx/scratching-the-surface-white-paperrecharge-card-security-npagedec2010
  2. ^'John Koza Interview – Scratchcards.org'. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  3. ^United States Patent 4,643,454
  4. ^Washington's Lottery. Financial Report 2016.
  5. ^Tennessee Lottery. Play It Again Program – FAQ.Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^www.play-scratchcards.co.uk describing different Internet scratchcards. Encourages play, but not associated with any one provider.
  7. ^'Scratchcard prizes may be misleading, OFT warns'. the Guardian. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  8. ^'Jackpots on some National Lottery scratchcards impossible to win'. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  9. ^'Man Wins £1,000,000 On The Last 20X Cash Scratchcard'. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scratchcards.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scratchcard&oldid=1003418739'

Activated Pack: The status of a pack of instant tickets when the first winning ticket in the pack has been validated or the pack has been assigned to a retailer for a specified period of time.

Advance Bet: The ability of a player to purchase wagers on draws that will be held in the future. The number of draws and time span vary from lottery to lottery.

Advertised Jackpot: The minimum prize amount the lottery estimates it will pay to the winner of a specific draw over a set annuity period.

Aged Pack: A pack of instant tickets at a retail location that has not been opened for sale or that the retailer has had in his/her possession for a specified period of time.

Agent (Lottery): An entity authorized and licensed by a lottery to sell lottery products.

Amber Alert: An electronic missing/abducted child warning issued by a local, state or federal authority. Many lotteries provide Amber Alert warnings through their lottery terminals and other point-of-sale postings.

Annuity: Payments made to a prize winner that are annuitized over an extended period (typically 25 to 30 years), as opposed to a Lump Sum payment.

Back Pair: Wager option for player to select the last two numbers in a set of Pick 3 or Pick 4 draws.

Ball Draw Machine: A device which mechanically scrambles a set of numbered balls, and then randomly draws from that mix to determine the winning numbers for a specific game. Some games utilize multiple ball draw machines.

Bearer Instrument: A designation of a lottery ticket under which the winnings from the ticket are payable to the person possessing the ticket or to the order of the person who has demonstrated bearer status by signing the ticket as the owner.

Beneficiary (Lottery): The designated recipient(s) of a lottery’s profits.

Bingo (Instant): An instant game played with bingo letters and numbers.

Bonus Number: A number drawn in some games in addition to the regularly-drawn set of numbers.

Book: A set of instant lottery tickets. Instant lottery tickets are sold in fan folded sets of perforated tickets with each of these sets comprising a book. The number of tickets in a book is often dependent on the price of a ticket – $1 tickets may be packaged in books of 300 tickets and $20 tickets may be packaged in books of 100 tickets.

Box(ed) Bet (Any Order): Wager option in which a player wins if selected numbers are drawn in any order, not just order as drawn (straight bet). Payment is lower than a combination bet.

Break-Open Ticket: A predetermined outcome lottery ticket in which players open panels on the ticket to determine if they won. These games are typically offered by charity organizations but are also popular with some lotteries. (See also Pull Tab.)

Broadcast: The process of sending messages, such as winning numbers, through the lottery network to the lottery terminals.

Fr Lottery Game

Cancelled Ticket: A terminal-printed ticket which is voided after it has been generated by a terminal.

Cash-for-Life Game: A lottery game which offers a set prize payment to be made in installments to that winner for the duration of the winner’s life. Currently there are both instant and draw games that offer this prize option.

Cash In (VLT): The cash placed into a video lottery terminal by a player. Does not include credits played.

Cash Lotto: A lottery game with a fixed or rolling pari-mutuel payout in which the top prize can only be taken as a lump sum payment.

Cash Option/Payout: A single payment, rather than an annuity paid over a multiple-year period, awarded as a prize to a player. The lump sum value is determined by bond rates under which an annuity is purchased. (See also Lump Sum.)

Cash Out (VLT): Prizes paid out by a video lottery terminal when a player cashes out winnings.

Cashing Agent: Lottery retailer authorized to cash winning lottery tickets.

Central Computer: The computer handling all gaming and validation activity for the lottery. This system communicates with all the lottery terminals in retail locations.

Charitable Gaming: Some lotteries are responsible for charitable gaming in their jurisdictions – they may provide the games, licensing functions or other assistance for charitable organizations that conduct fundraising activities like bingo, raffles, Monte Carlo and other games. They ensure that charitable gaming is conducted according to the rules and regulations of the jurisdiction.

Claims Center: A location at which players can have tickets validated and collect prize amounts which exceed those payable by a retailer.

Claim Form: An official lottery form filled out by a player when claiming a prize of at least a specified value at the lottery (may also be used by certain lottery agents).

Fr lottery game online

Claims Process: The procedure and/or paperwork involved in awarding a prize to a player.

Combination Bet: A wager option in which a player selects a box bet and a straight bet for one set of numbers. A 3- or 4-digit number is played straight and every combination of that number is covered. Cost depends on the number of combinations.

Commission: 1) The percentage of sales provided to a lottery retailer as an incentive to partner with a lottery as a lottery agent. 2) The governing body of a lottery, which operates in either an advisory or authoritative capacity.

Consignment Billing: A billing option that gives the retailer a chance to sell ticket packs before they are billed. This option allows retailers to have more ticket stock on hand without having to pay for it up front.

Corporate Account: Chain of stores or very large merchants (retailer/agent). Retailer with multiple locations in one jurisdiction, or throughout the country with a central headquarters.

Daily Game: Games, such as Pick 3 and Pick 4, which have a daily draw. Some lotteries also offer multiple draws per day.

Dates Game: A terminal-based game in which the player selects and wagers on a series of dates. Winners are selected randomly by a draw machine, and prizes are awarded for matches.

Demographics (Player): The statistical study of human populations especially with reference to size and density, distribution and vital statistics. The study of total size, sex, territorial distribution, age, composition and other characteristics of human populations; the analysis of changes in the make-up of a population.

Disclaimer: A denial or disavowal of legal claim, relinquishment of or formal refusal to accept an interest or estate, a statement establishing liability/responsibility or non-liability/non-responsibility by an organization.

Double: A three- or four-digit game that contains two numbers of the same digit, i.e. 122.

Rules

Double Double: A four-digit number made up of two doubles, i.e. 1221.

Draw Certification: A process by which systems and drawings are verified. An official record of the results of a drawing that is signed by a drawing manager/supervisor, and in some instances by an independent auditor.

Draw Game: The current name some lotteries use for computerized numbers games (daily numbers, lotto); they were originally called “online games” to distinguish them from early “offline” versions that were manually calculated and tracked. (See also Jackpot Game, Online Game and Terminal-Based Game.)

Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT): The electronic banking process which utilizes clearing house transactions to deposit or debit authorized accounts.

Exact Order: A wager option in which player-selected numbers match drawn numbers exactly in the order drawn. Also termed “straight.”

Five-Digit Game (Pick 5): A game in which the player chooses exactly five numbers, 0 through 9, and which typically offers a fixed prize structure.

Fixed Payouts: The number and amounts of prizes established for a game, regardless of how many tickets are sold. Typically this is the case for daily numbers games such as Pick 3 and Pick 4.

Force Majeure: A clause frequently included in lottery contracts to protect the parties from their inability to perform when the non-performance is caused by natural disasters and other extraordinary, unforeseeable events.

Four-Digit Game (Pick 4): A game in which the player chooses exactly four numbers, 0 through 9, and which typically offers a fixed prize structure.

Freedom of Information Act (FOIA): A law which allows individuals or organizations to request data and information that is a matter of public record. FOIA laws vary by state.

Front Pair: Wager option for player to select the first two numbers in a set of Pick 3 or Pick 4 draws.

Gambling: Wagering money in an attempt to make a profit. To bet on something.

Game Closed: The time when instant tickets for a specified game can no longer be ordered or distributed by the lottery or retailer.

Game End: The official date, determined by the lottery, that an instant game has ended. Prizes must then be redeemed within the time period required by the lottery.

Game Expiration: The time after an instant game has been closed and the game prize redemption date has been passed. Tickets from the game can no longer be redeemed.

Game Matrix: The configuration of the amount of numbers matched and the payout amounts for each match for terminal-based games. Example: a 6-of-49 lotto game matrix.

Game Show (Lottery): A televised show which includes the draw event for any of a variety of games, including daily and lotto games. Extended game shows may also include second-chance games with live player and audience participation.

Gaming System: All components used in providing lottery services, such as central computer, back-up computer, lottery terminals and the telecommunications network. Also referred to as the central computer.

Gray Machines: Illegal video lottery terminals or other types of gaming machines not authorized by the jurisdiction in which they are operated.

Handle: The total amount of cash and credits played in a gaming machine, such as video lottery terminals or slot machines.

iGaming: The ability to place wagers via the internet on any form of casino gaming and/or sports betting.

iLottery: The ability to place wagers via the internet on lottery games such as lotto, keno and instant games.

Incentives (Retailer): Offerings to retailers, usually in the form of cash, to reward and retain their participation and partnership with a lottery.

Instant Game (Scratcher): A lottery ticket on which a player scratches latex coating from one of more play areas to determine if he or she has won, as indicated by the symbols and words that are revealed. (See also Scratcher.)

Instant Ticket Dispenser: An acrylic counter display unit housing multiple instant ticket game packs and accessible to the retailer only. Mainly used in convenience stores behind the service counter.

Instant Ticket Vending Machine (ITVM): A free-standing vending device into which a player inserts cash or other forms of payment, where available, and then selects instant game tickets they wish to purchase.

Interprovincial Lottery: A consortium of the five lottery organizations which represent all Canadian provinces (Atlantic Lottery, British Columbia Lottery Corp., Loto-Quebec, Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp., and the Western Canada Lottery Corp.), participating individually in various multi-jurisdictional lottery games.

Invitation to Bid (ITB): A formal, public notice by an organization soliciting costs and details for a specified service.

Jackpot: The top prize in any game.

Jackpot Fatigue: A point at which players, when jackpots remain steady for a period of time, lose interest in playing. The fatigue threshold increases as jackpots increase over time.

Jackpot Game: The current name some lotteries use for computerized numbers games (daily numbers, lotto); they were originally called “online games” to distinguish them from early “offline” versions that were manually calculated and tracked. (See also Draw Game, Online Game an Terminal-Based Game.)

Keno: A lottery game in which a player chooses “X” numbers with the object to match as many of “Z” numbers chosen by the lottery from a field of “Y” numbers. One of the classic keno games is 10 of 20 of 80. With most keno games, players can choose how many numbers they want to pick to match – i.e, they can vary “X,” thereby affecting their odds of winning. Keno draws typically occur every four or five minutes.

Key Account: Large chain or high volume retailer.

Latex: The soft coating on an instant ticket that is removed by the player to reveal play data.

Launch (game): The process of introducing a new product. The first date that a new lottery product is offered to the public.

Licensed Properties: Trademarked brands and products that have been licensed by a lottery for use in game themes, images, etc.

Lottery: 1) An entity that operates or administers lottery games – usually a governmental or quasi-government agency or a corporation licensed by a government. 2) A game in which all plays have an equal chance of winning. 3) A game with three components for the players: a prize to be won, a chance to win and not win, and an element of consideration (such as buying a ticket) to enter the game.

Lottery Beneficiaries: The designated recipient(s) of lottery profits.

Lottery Commission: The members of a board who have oversight of the entire lottery organization. The Commission typically is selected by the governor of the state.

Lottery Drawing: The process of selecting numbers to determine which previously sold lottery tickets are winners. Lottery drawings may be conducted using mechanical devices with balls, spinning devices or with computerized random number generators.

Lottery Play Center (Play Station): A free-standing point-of-purchase podium-like structure that advertises the lottery and gives players a place to fill out lottery forms and holds items such as lottery play slips and informational brochures.

Lottery Sales Representative (LSR): A lottery employee responsible for servicing lottery retailers’ needs in a particular geographical region or territory, or by a specific classification of retailer.

Lotto: A lottery game in which a player chooses “X” numbers from a field of “Y” numbers. The games are frequently referred to using “X of Y” – such as Lotto 6 of 49. The games usually have several prize levels including a large jackpot prize that increases if it is not won.

Lump Sum: A single prize payment, as opposed to an annuitized payment. The lump sum value is determined by bond rates used to purchase an annuity. (See also Cash Option.)

Mega Millions: A $2 multi-jurisdictional lotto game offered by every American lottery with the ability to generate huge jackpots.

Multi-Jurisdiction Lottery: Lottery games that are offered in more than one jurisdiction, allowing lotteries to generate larger jackpots than they could individually. Jackpots may be paid in lump sums or annuities. The prize pool is shared by all participating lotteries. Examples include Powerball, Mega Millions, Hot Lotto, Tri-State Megabucks, Cash4Life and Lucky for Life in the United States, and Lotto 6/49 and Lotto Max in Canada.

Multiplier: An extra number drawn to increase the payout if the wager is a winner. The drawn number (Y) will multiply the player’s prize (X) by that drawn (Y) value. A multiplier option usually requires an additional wager amount.

Multi-State Lottery Association (MUSL): A non-profit, government-benefit association owned and operated by its member lotteries. Each MUSL member offers one or more of the games administered by the association, which include Powerball and Hot Lotto.

Net Machine Income (VLT): Cash In minus Cash Out for a video lottery terminal.

North American Association of State and Provincial Lotteries (NASPL): The non-profit professional association representing all government-sanctioned lotteries in the United States, Canada, Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.

Numbers Game: Pick 2, Pick 3, Pick 4 and Pick 5 daily games, offering various options for placing bets (straight, box, combination).

Off-Shore Wagering: Wagering services outside of U.S. borders that illegally accept wagers from U.S. citizens.

Online Game: Lotteries began using the term “online” decades ago to refer to computerized numbers games (daily numbers, lotto), to distinguish them from early “offline” versions that were manually calculated and tracked. Lotteries still may use the term to refer to games offered via a lottery retail terminal at a licensed lottery retail location, but in this context they do not mean games offered via the internet. (See also Draw Game, Jackpot Game and Terminal-Based Game.)

Pari-mutuel: A payoff method in which the total available prize pool is split between all winners at a particular prize level.

Passive Game: Early pre-numbered lottery ticket games in which player wins if their numbers match (or partially match) numbers from a drawing. Some lotteries around the world still use these pre-numbered games.

Play Slip (Bet Slip): A machine-readable paper form used by players to choose their lottery numbers. A retailer can insert the play slip into a reader and the lottery terminal will generate a lottery ticket for a draw or terminal-based game.

Player Activated Terminal (PAT): A free-standing self-service device which accepts currency or other forms of payment, where available, and permits a player to select and play terminal-based lottery games.

Players Club: A collection of players who register with a particular lottery, usually via the internet or using mobile devices, to receive points for participating in various lottery promotions, jackpot alerts, and various “special offers” related to lottery ticket purchases. (See also VIP Club.)

Point-of-Sale (POS): Promotional materials that are on display near a lottery terminal or register for the purposes of advertising or promoting specific lottery games.

Pool: Drawing pool – A logical collection of the plays or tickets for a specific drawing; all the tickets eligible for a specific drawing are said to be in that drawing’s pool. Prize pool – The money from sales that will be used to pay prizes in a specific drawing.

Powerball: A $2 multi-jurisdictional lotto game offered by every American lottery with the ability to generate huge jackpots.

Prize Assignment: The ability of a player to pass on his/her prize claim to another individual or organization.

Prize Payout: The percentage of sales returned to the players in the form of prizes.

Profit (Revenue): Typically, the funds that are returned to a jurisdiction’s government at the end of any fiscal year.

Pull Tab: A predetermined outcome lottery ticket in which players open panels on the ticket to determine if they won. These games are typically offered by charity organizations but are also popular with some lotteries. (See also Break-Open Ticket.)

Quad: A four-digit number made up of the same number repeated four times, i.e. 5555.

Quick Pick/Easy Pick: 1) A feature in which the lottery terminal randomly chooses numbers for a player, frequently used in lotto games and lotto-type games. 2) A lottery ticket produced by using the quick pick feature.

Racino: A common term used to describe a race track that also offers casino-style gaming, such as the video lottery terminals and table games run by many lotteries.

Random Number Generator (RNG): A secured computerized system, used in place of ball draw machines in certain jurisdictions or for certain games, which draws random numbers for a lotto-type game.

Randomizer: A device or program that generates a certified random set of numbers.

Redemption: The process of presenting and processing a ticket for a prize claim.

Request for Proposals (RFP): A formal, public notice by an organization inviting vendors to submit ideas, concepts and costs related to a specific end.

Responsible Gambling: 1) The practice whereby a person spends only what he or she can afford on lottery tickets and other gambling activities. 2) A program in place by lotteries and other gaming providers that provides information and resources about responsible gambling to players.

Retailer: An entity authorized and licensed by a lottery to sell lottery products.

Retailer Cashing Bonus: An incentive provided to a lottery retailer to reward and encourage them to redeem and cash winning tickets.

Retailer Commission: The amount paid to a lottery retailer by the lottery in return for selling lottery tickets; the commission is based on the retailer’s sales, and in many cases, cashing of winning tickets.

Riverboat Casino: A type of casino that may be on a freely-floating ship or may be authorized to remain at a specified dock.

Rollover: The continued accumulation of a jackpot when drawn numbers are not matched by any ticket sold.

Scratcher: A lottery ticket on which a player scratches latex coating from one of more play areas to determine if he or she has won, as indicated by the symbols and words that are revealed. (See also Instant Game.)

Second Chance Drawing: A feature whereby non-winning lottery tickets provide an additional opportunity to win prizes other than those in the specific game presented on the ticket.

Sleeve: A pack of Pull Tab tickets.

Slingo: A game consisting of a combination of slots and bingo.

Specialty Items: Promotional and premium items for players.

Spiel (Kicker): Available in some jurisdictions, a random, computer-generated number which appears on a ticket produced from a lottery terminal. A spiel is an optional additional purchase for the player, and is drawn separately from the main numbers on the lottery ticket.

Sponsorship: A lottery’s support, usually financial, of an activity outside of its normal retail sales.

Sports Lottery: Offered by many lotteries around the world, and all lotteries in Canada, a sports lottery involves wagering on sporting events. May also be known as “Toto” or “Sports Pools” in some jurisdictions.

Fr Lottery Games

Straight: Wager option in which player wins if numbers selected are an identical match, in order, to the numbers drawn. Also termed Exact Order.

Fr Lottery Game

Subscription: A paid-in-advance program in which a player purchases a specified number of lottery tickets to be drawn over a specified time period. Subscriptions may be offered to players in several ways, including via the internet where allowed by law.

Sweep Account: A banking account which allows the lottery to credit or debit funds to a retailer through electronic funds transfers (EFT).

Sweepstakes: Typically a game where prizes are awarded to a specified number of entrants drawn from a pool. As opposed to a lottery, there is no cost or purchase required to be entered in to the pool.

Swept: When payment is electronically taken from retailer’s account.

Telecommunications Network: The telecommunications infrastructure that provides point-to-point communication between the lottery terminals and the central computer. These networks may include analog or digital components and be comprised of wire, fiber, radio or satellite transmission paths.

Telemarketing (Tel-Sell): Inside sales activities communicating with retailers via electronic means.

Terminal: An electronic device used for entering plays and printing tickets for lottery games such as lotto and other numbers games and for cashing lottery tickets. Lottery terminals also have administrative features for retailers.

Terminal-Based Game: The current name some lotteries use for computerized numbers games (daily numbers, lotto); they were originally called “online games” to distinguish them from early “offline” versions that were manually calculated and tracked. (See also Draw Game, Jackpot Game and Online Game.)

Terminal Download: The process of sending new or updated software to the lottery terminals.

Terminal Software: The computer program that controls the functionality of a lottery terminal.

Three-Digit Game (Pick 3): A game in which the player chooses exactly three numbers, 0 through 9, and which typically offers a fixed prize structure.

Ticket Stock: Special paper used for printing tickets for terminal-based lottery games at lottery terminals.

Toto: A term used to describe sports betting in many jurisdictions around the world.

Training Mode: An operational setting for a lottery terminal in which the retailer can practice using system features without creating actual lottery tickets.

Tribal Casino: A gaming facility owned and operated by Native Americans on their own tribal land.

Triples: A three-digit number made up of the same number repeated three times, i.e. 777.

Tri-State Lottery: A consortium of three states (Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont) that offer joint games such as Tri-State Megabucks.

Trunk Stock: Instant ticket inventory kept in a sales representative’s vehicle for the purpose of distribution to lottery retailers as needed.

Unclaimed Prizes: A winning ticket that has been properly sold but not claimed by a player before its expiration date. Any expired prizes that remain unclaimed at the end of a lottery’s fiscal year may then be transferred to a variety of jurisdictional funds.

Validation: 1) The process of confirming a lottery ticket is a winning ticket, confirming the ticket has not been previously validated, and marking the ticket as “validated” in the system (a winning ticket can only be validated one time.) 2) An attempt to validate a lottery ticket. If the ticket is not a winner or has previously been validated, the retailer (or validation clerk) will receive an appropriate message.

Vault: Lottery distribution center.

Vendors: 1) Industry suppliers providing goods and services to the lotteries and other vendors. 2) Licensed lottery retailers.

Video Lottery Terminal (VLT): A free-standing electronic terminal offered by some lotteries and connected to a central gaming system, on which the player may play a variety of casino-style games similar to slot machines.

VIP Club: A collection of players who register with a particular lottery, usually via the internet or using mobile devices, to receive points for participating in various lottery promotions, jackpot alerts, and various “special offers” related to lottery ticket purchases. (See also Players Club.)

Fr Lottery Game Online

Winner Awareness: An effort to publicize or advertise actual lottery winners for the purposes of promoting ticket sales.

Fr Lottery Game Rules

Withholding: The amounts required to be subtracted from a winner’s prize to cover initial payments for state, federal, and in some cases local, taxes. Some lotteries also withhold outstanding monetary obligations, such as child support, owed to the jurisdiction.

World Lottery Association (WLA): The professional lottery association representing the major lottery organizations throughout the world.