Euro Lotto and Something You Might Not Recognize. How it Functions, Who it Applies to and How You Can You Play that Tremendous European Lotto
The European lotto was originally launched by the national lotteries of France, the United Kingdom and Spain and was revealed on Feb 04. The initial draw was on February 13th-04 in Paris. The France, Spain and the United Kingdom were the only nations partaking in the beginning but lotteries from Luxembourg, Portugal, Switzerland, Austria, Belgium and Ireland also got involved in Oct 04.
The Euromillions lottery or the Euro Lottery, as it’s normally well-known, gathers the ticket revenues of the nine partaking European countries awarding a gigantic Euro Millions jackpot. With the sum of nations joining the EU on the increase, this will without a doubt lead to more states partaking in the Euro lottery. A growth in the number of individuals partaking in the Euro Lotto will result in a continued increase of the already large Euro Lottery “jackpots”.
Q. How To Play The Euro Lottery?
Every player must pick out five main numbers from one to fifty plus 2 Lucky Star numbers from one to nine. During the lottery draw, five main and 2 “lucky-star” numbers are then picked out at random from 2 lotto draw machines containing numbered lotto balls.
Euro Lotto Awards
The chances of scooping up the Euro Lotto “jackpot” is a distant one in seventy six million but the chances of acquiring a money prize is a fairly decent one in twenty four. If the jackpot is not won in a given lottery draw, it is carried forward to the next lottery draw which results in an ever increasing “jackpot” prize. Recent rules added on the 09 February 2007 set the number of consecutive roll overs to 11, with the jack-pot rolling down to smaller prize levels on the eleventh lotto draw if the prize is not collected.
The new regulations likewise initiated EuroMillions Super Draw which happen twice yearly plus they offer jackpots in the region of £100 million. The difference with Super-Draws is that the “jackpot” has to be collected during the calendar week of the lotto draw; this means, if there is no ticket matching, all the numbers drawn and the top prize will then be allotted to the ticket holder(s) on the next winning prize tier.











