Is Powerball The Same In Colorado and Arizona?
For decades people have been playing chance games like state run lotteries for the thrill of someday winning a mega jackpot. This is especially true for people playing Powerball. Colorado, for example, has had many people lining up at the local convenience store, or state lottery, to get their weekly Powerball tickets. Recent winners include several $1 million dollar winners.
Powerball is one of those games that you have no control over. It’s not like playing popular card games like poker. At least in poker, to some degree, you have a little bit of control over how each hand is played. You can ask for new cards and bluff other players for a chance at winning the cash pot. Powerball is much different. You choose the numbers you want to play and hope that when the winning numbers are called, yours is the one that is chosen.
Working on a system of random chance, and the way that certain balls drop once the button is pushed, the winning numbers are announced. When you stop and think about it, the odds of winning at Powerball are astronomical. But, people still line up for the chances at winning at Powerball. Arizona residents get the chance to win in that state’s Powerball every Wednesday and Saturday. Residents can also play the same ticket for ten consecutive weeks if they have the clerk mark off the multi week option.
For just a dollar a ticket, you have the chance of landing into the winning of a huge jackpot worth millions. For those who are not into those kinds of odds, there is also an excitement about playing card games for money. Many people get together, throughout the country, in their basements, living rooms, garages, or anywhere else they can gather for weekly nights of poker. Although there’s a lot of money changing hands at these friendly games, it still provides a better chance of winning than buying a Powerball ticket.
Powerball throughout the country is a huge business. While the chances of winning at it are astronomical, people do win. Some people even hit on the major jackpot, and then several smaller ones all within a few months of each other. When you think about it, paying $1 for the chance to win millions is a pretty small sum to pay. Even if all you get is the thrill and excitement of hoping for the right numbers.
Filed under: Financial Advice





