How We Calculate Our Statistics
LottoScopeX turns real historical lottery draws into simple, visual statistics. Every number and percentage you see is computed directly from published draw results — this page explains exactly how, in plain language, for each feature on the site.
Our data
Each lottery on LottoScopeX has its own dataset of past draw results — the winning main numbers, bonus numbers, and draw dates — sourced from official published results. We add new draws as they happen and never alter historical figures after the fact.
Frequency stats
For a given set of draws, we count how many times each possible number appeared as a winning number, then express that count as a percentage of draws. A number that appeared in 20 of the last 100 draws has a frequency of 20%. That's the entire calculation — no weighting, no adjustment.
Hot & cold numbers
Once we have frequency counts for the last 100 draws, hot numbers are simply the ones with the highest counts, and cold numbers are the ones with the lowest. It's a ranking of the same frequency data, nothing more — a hot number isn't "due" to keep appearing, and a cold number isn't "due" to appear soon. Each draw is independent.
Range analysis
We split each lottery's number range into five bands — 1–9, 10–19, 20–29, 30–39, and 40 and above — and count how many winning numbers from the last 100 draws fall into each band. This shows whether numbers have historically clustered in certain bands, purely as a descriptive breakdown of what's already happened.
Probability patterns (our signature feature)
This is the most detailed calculation on the site, so here it is step by step. For each of the five number ranges above:
- We take the last 100 draws for that lottery and line them up in chronological order.
- We look at every consecutive pair of draws — draw 1 → draw 2, draw 2 → draw 3, and so on — giving us up to 99 pairs.
- For each pair, we count how many numbers from the range appeared in the first draw, then compare that to how many appeared in the very next draw: more, fewer, or the same amount.
- We separately track what happens when a range is completely absent from a draw (zero numbers) — specifically, how often it "comes back" with at least one number in the very next draw.
- Whichever outcome happened most often across all 99 pairs becomes that range's headline pattern, shown as a single plain-language sentence with its real percentage — for example, "the 20–29 range tends to repeat the same amount 41% of the time."
This is a historical tendency, not a forecast. Every draw is an independent random event, and a pattern holding 60% of the time over the last 100 draws does not mean it will hold in the next one. We show it because it's an interesting, honestly-computed way to look at the data — never as a way to predict results.
What we never do
We never fabricate, simulate, or estimate a number. We never weight our Number Generator by past frequency — it's a genuinely random pick, unconnected to any statistic on the site. And we never claim any of this improves anyone's odds of winning. Lottery draws are random; LottoScopeX just makes the history behind them easy to explore.