This invention relates to games of chance, and, more particularly, to increasing usage of lottery tickets by reusing unassigned electronic lottery ticket records. The invention includes a gaming method and a gaming apparatus. The invention also encompasses a program product for implementing the gaming method.
Lottery games have become popular in many jurisdictions in the United States and elsewhere. Lottery games are played with a set (sometimes referred to as a game set) of predefined tickets or game play records that are each associated with a particular result in the game. Some of the predefined tickets or game play records are each associated with a respective winning result and thus represent winning tickets/game play records. Other predefined tickets or game play records in the game set are each associated with a respective losing result and thus represent losing tickets/game play records. Since the set of tickets or game play records making up a lottery game has a predefined number of tickets or game play records and predefined number of winning and losing tickets/records, the set has a predefined payout to players and predefined hold for the game operator. That is, assuming that all tickets or game play records in the game set are sold, both the cumulative payout to the players and the cumulative value in from ticket or game play record sales are known.
Traditional lottery games are played with a paper lottery ticket. These paper lottery tickets are commonly printed with graphics consistent with a theme of the game. The printed material for each respective ticket includes some result indicator that is correlated to, or indicates, the result associated with the respective ticket. These result indicators are commonly covered or obscured at the time the ticket is sold. Once the player obtains the ticket, he or she may remove the cover or obscuring material to reveal the result indicator and thus the result associated with the ticket.
The paper tickets in a traditional lottery game are commonly produced at some manufacturing facility in books of tickets, each made up of a continuous roll of individual tickets or a continuous fan fold stack of individual tickets with the individual tickets separated by perforations or break lines. Typically, a lottery game set will include a very large number of tickets, and the ticket books produced at the manufacturing facility each include only a fraction of the total tickets that make up a complete lottery game. The tickets are randomly ordered in the ticket books and are sold and distributed sequentially from the randomized book of tickets so that the results in the lottery game are distributed to players in a random order unknown to the players or ticket sellers.
Lottery games have been implemented in electronic form in which each ticket is represented by an electronic data structure rather than a physical paper ticket. An electronic data structure correlating to a respective chance in a lottery-type game will be referred to further in this disclosure and accompanying claims as a “game play record.” These game play records may take on a number of different forms. On one end of the spectrum, each game play record includes a result indicator, record identifier, and data that defines graphics that are used to display the result of the game play record to the player. At the other end of the spectrum, each game play record may include only a result indicator, and perhaps a record identifier, a table identifier, and a prize value. Regardless of the particular form of data structure used for the individual game play records, the game play records are commonly grouped in data files analogous to books of paper tickets and distributed in some random order from the file. Since the game play records are arranged in data files, the random distribution may be performed by randomizing the order of game play records in the respective data file and then distributing the game play records sequentially in that random order, or the game play records can be ordered in the data files and distributed randomly from the files.
The electronic lottery games may be implemented with a gaming system that includes a central processing system for storing different files that each contain some number of game play records and are analogous to books of physical lottery tickets. The central processing system distributes either individual game play records or game play record files to player stations which are in communication with the central processing system. In some cases, an intermediate component may receive game play record files from the central processing system and then communicate game play records to the player stations. The player stations include a display device for displaying information to the player, an arrangement for accepting wagers, an arrangement for receiving inputs from the player, and in some cases, an arrangement for storing game play record files containing some number of individual game play records. In this example electronic lottery system, a player enters the lottery game by making a game play request at a player station. In response to a game play request entered by the player, either the central processing system or an intermediate component (or the player station itself where the player station stores game play record files) assigns a particular game play record for the game play request. Where the central processing system or intermediate component is responsible for assigning individual game play records for game play requests, the central processing system or intermediate component also communicates to the player station either the assigned game play record or result information from the assigned game play record. Regardless of which system component is responsible for assigning the game play record for a given game play request, the player station ultimately displays the result associated with the game play record assigned to the player.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,241,606 to Riendeau et al. discloses a lottery-type gaming system in which electronic lottery game play records are created for a game and divided into two batches, with each batch being further divided into a distribution portion and an exchange pool. Groups of electronic game play records referred to as “packs” are then defined from the distribution portions and downloaded to distribution terminals. Each distribution terminal uses its respective packs of electronic game play records for satisfying game play requests entered at that terminal. At the end of some accounting period at a respective distribution terminal, information on game play records remaining unused at the distribution terminal is communicated back to a central processing system. The unused game play records are then collected with the respective exchange pool of undistributed game play records. Game play records from the exchange pool and unused but previously distributed game play records are then used to make additional distribution packs of game play records that are downloaded to distribution terminals for use in satisfying game play requests in some subsequent accounting period. Once there are not enough electronic game play records in the exchange pool to create another day's distribution portion from which the “packs” are created, the game is closed and final statistics are generated showing tickets sold, tickets remaining, pay-outs, etc.
It will be noted that where all of the lottery tickets/game play records for a lottery game are not sold, the results of the game will differ from the intended design of the game. That is, the total sales for the game will be lower than the total designed for the game. The total hold and payout may be higher or lower depending upon the results associated with the unused lottery tickets/game play records. Although the system disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,241,606 effectively reuses previously distributed game play records, the system still closes a game before all lottery game play records are used, thus causing the overall results of the lottery game to vary from the lottery game design.
The present invention provides a method for electronically implemented lottery games that allows previously distributed but unused lottery game play records to be redistributed for use in response to future game play requests. The present invention also encompasses gaming systems and program products for implementing this gaming method.
As used in the remainder of this disclosure and the accompanying claims a “lottery game” or simply “game” will refer to a set of game play records having a predefined frequency of results at each of a number of different result levels/tiers. A player participates in, that is, plays a lottery game by purchasing a game play record included in the set of such records making up the lottery game. For example, a lottery game may include a total of 50,000 game play records with each result being included in one of six result levels and with each result level associated with a particular prize. Continuing with this example, the lottery game may include 5 game play records at the sixth and highest result level, 95 game play records at the fifth result level, 900 game play records at the fourth result level, 4000 game play records at the third result level, 25,000 game play records at the second result level, and finally 20,000 game play records at the lowest result level. A player plays this lottery game by purchasing one of the 50,000 game play records.
A method according to the present invention divides a lottery game into a number of distribution groups preferably at a central computer system. Each respective distribution group includes a number of game play records from the lottery game. For example, where a lottery game is made up of 50,000 game play records, a distribution group may include 5,000 game play records selected from the total set of 50,000. Two or more of these distribution groups are distributed to an assignment component included in the gaming system. This assignment component may comprise a player station in the gaming system, the central computer system, or some intermediate component between the central computer system and player station. The method assigns game play records from the distribution groups in response to the game play requests entered at the player stations. This process continues until, upon the occurrence of some collection condition, the unassigned game play records of the previously distributed distribution groups are collected and used to form one or more new distribution groups. These new distribution groups are distributed to an assignment component and then used just like the original distribution groups to satisfy game play requests.
In some preferred forms of the invention, the new distribution groups are each formed according to a game play record allocation requirement that defines some standard that the new distribution group must meet before being finalized and distributed for use in satisfying game play requests. For example, the game play record allocation requirement may require a minimum payout from the new distribution group, a minimum frequency of potential results (result levels) in the lottery game, and/or at least a minimum frequency for higher level results. Also, some forms of the invention may allow unassigned game play records from a second lottery game, or even a number of other games to be combined with collected, unassigned game play records from a first lottery game to produce a new distribution group of game play records.
A gaming system embodying one form of the invention includes a central computer system, a game play record distribution component, a game play record assignment component, and a game play record collection component. A suitable data storage device associated with the distribution component stores the original distribution groups produced for a lottery game. The distribution component distributes two or more of the distribution groups to the game play record assignment component included in the system. The game play record assignment component assigns game play records from the two or more distribution groups of game play records in response to game play requests entered at one or more player stations serviced by the game play record assignment component. The game play record collection component collects unassigned game play records from the two or more distribution groups and forms one or more new distribution groups from collected unassigned game play records. These new distribution groups may then be distributed to assignment components in the system by the game play record distribution component.
The present invention uses previously distributed but unassigned game play records to produce new distribution groups that may be indistinguishable from the original distribution groups for a given lottery game in terms of payout, potential result frequency, and hold. By reusing previously distributed but unassigned game play records in producing new distribution sets, substantially all of the game play records for a given lottery game may be sold, with the result that the actual payout and hold for a given game may substantially match the designed payout and hold for the game. That is, since all or substantially all of the game play records produced for a given lottery game may be used/sold according to the invention, the payout and hold from the lottery game remains essentially predetermined. These and other advantages and features of the invention will be apparent from the following description of the preferred embodiments considered along with the accompanying drawings.
The present invention will be described initially below with reference to an implementation using a particular arrangement of hardware and data structures. This implementation includes a hardware arrangement similar to that described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,733,385 issued on May 11, 2004. The entire content of U.S. Pat. No. 6,733,385 is incorporated herein by this reference. However, it will be appreciated that the present invention is by no means limited to this particular arrangement of hardware, the methods implemented in the hardware, or the example data structures described below. Numerous variations on this implementation are possible within the scope of the present invention.
Players participate in lottery games offered through system 100 by entering game play requests at any one of a number of electronic player stations (EPSs)103 included in the system. Some gaming sites in the illustrated system include a local area server (LAS) 102 and a number of player stations 103. However, some gaming sites include simply one or more player stations 103 which communicate directly with CGS 101. The gaming sites may comprise dedicated gaming facilities (casinos) or retail establishments such as convenience stores depending upon the regulatory environment under which the lottery games are operated.
A lottery result for a game play request is presented to the player at a player station 103. Each lottery result correlates to a result defined by a respective game play record that is assigned for the game play request. The game play request defining the result may either be selected at the player station 103 itself, or by a system component separate from the respective player station 103 from which the game play request was initiated. In one preferred embodiment, a player station 103 implements a game play record assignment component which selects a respective game play request from a distribution group for that respective player station. In this case, one or more distribution groups of lottery tickets may be stored at the respective player station 103. In other preferred embodiments, the game play record assignment component is implemented through an intermediate component such as an LAS 102 which may store one or more distribution groups from which game play records may be assigned in response to game play requests originating from one or more player stations 103 serviced by the respective LAS. In still other embodiments, the game play record assignment component may be implemented at CGS 101.
Upon the occurrence of some collection condition, a game play record collection component which may be implemented at CGS 101 collects unassigned lottery tickets from the assignment component to which one or more distribution groups have been distributed for satisfying game play requests. These collected unassigned game play records are used to form a new distribution group of game play records. The game play record distribution component may then send the new distribution group to a player station 103, LAS 102, or other device implementing an assignment component. Game play records may then be assigned from this “new distribution group” to satisfy incoming game play requests. The designation “new distribution group” may be used in this disclosure to distinguish between a distribution group of game play records that has been created from collected, unassigned game play records and an original distribution group created from game play records that have never before been distributed in a group of game play records made available for satisfying game play requests in a gaming system.
CGS 101 and each LAS 102 included in system 100, as shown in
It will be appreciated that the particular configuration of devices shown in
A player control arrangement 202 associated with a respective player station 103 may include any type of input arrangement. For example, player control arrangement 202 may include one or more push buttons, keys, or lever activated switches, for example. Also, the player control arrangement 202 may include a touch screen and thus be integrated with display 203. It will also be appreciated that a player station 103 that may be used in the present invention may include more than a single display. Thus, display 203 includes at least one video monitor/display such as a CRT, LCD, plasma, or other display device for displaying graphics in the course of game play.
It will be appreciated that
Examples of additional components that may be included with a player station 103 include a separate graphic processor for driving display 203, a sound system for providing high quality audio output at the player station 103, and a visual alerting device such as a light mounted at the top of the player station. Display 203 may also include or comprise a mechanical display arrangement such as an arrangement of slot machine style spinning reels or wheels. Also, those familiar with gaming machines will appreciate that each player station may include a device or arrangement of devices for accepting currency, tokens, and/or vouchers, and a device or arrangement of devices for dispensing currency, tokens, and/or vouchers as winnings. Although not shown in the drawings, each player station 103 may include an arrangement for receiving payments from a player and an arrangement for making payouts to the player. Payouts may be made using a coin or token dispensing arrangement included in player station 103. Alternatively, or in addition to a coin or token dispensing arrangement, player station 103 may include a printer (not shown) for printing a ticket or voucher showing the player's winnings or account value. The player may redeem this ticket through a game operator, for example, or the player may use the ticket in another gaming terminal. In yet other arrangements, wagers and winnings may be tracked through a suitable player account arrangement included in gaming system 100, and a player may redeem their account through a system cashier or through some other suitable account interface arrangement. Of course, any appropriate device for receiving and issuing value in games played according to the present invention may be used, and the device may even be completely separate from the player station 103. Furthermore, the various player stations 103 included in a system such as system 100 need not be the same throughout the system. There may be wide variations in displays, player interfaces, and other components included in each respective player station 103.
Assignment component 301 includes an arrangement of elements for assigning game play records 303 from distribution groups 302 (and new distribution groups 302N as will be described further below). In particular, assignment component 301 includes a storage device 304 for storing preferably a number of distribution groups 302 and/or 302N, where each distribution group includes a number of game play records 303. Assignment component 301 also includes a processing device 305. As discussed above in connection with system 100 shown particularly in
A distribution group 302, 302N according to the invention may be embodied in any suitable data structure.
The illustrated preferred game play record 303 includes a record identifier 306, a result index value 307, a prize amount 308, and a status value 309. These values in the game play record 303 are set when game play records 303 are first formed for the respective lottery game. It will be noted that since each game play record 303 is associated with a respective prize amount, each game play record is associated with a win/loss result for the lottery game. All game play records 303 are initially given a status value 309 of unassigned. This status can be indicated by a single bit of data and indicates that the game play record is unused, that is, that the game play record has not yet been assigned for a game play request. When a respective game play record 303 is assigned for a game play request, processor 305 associated with assignment component 301 causes the status value 309 of the assigned game play record 303 to be updated to an assigned/used status. With the status value 309 of the game play record 303 set to assigned/used status, the respective game play record 303 will not be available for assignment to an additional incoming game play request. Once set to an assigned/used status at field 309, the respective game play record 303 will also not be available for use in forming a new distribution group 302N according to the present invention as will be discussed further below. Only unassigned game play records 303 are available to form new distribution groups 302N.
It will be appreciated that numerous other arrangements may be used to indicate which game play records 303 in a distribution group 302, 302N have been assigned for a game play request and which have not been so assigned. For example, one alternative arrangement maintains the assigned/unassigned status information for game play records of a distribution group in a separate data table. Also, game play records may be removed from a given distribution group as they are assigned so that the mere presence in a given data structure indicates that the game play record is unassigned. The invention encompasses any arrangement for distinguishing between assigned and unassigned game play records.
The structure shown in
It will be appreciated that game play records 303 are preferably assigned randomly to satisfy game play requests. This randomization may be accomplished in any suitable fashion. One method for ensuring game play records 303 are assigned randomly is to randomize the order of game play records in the distribution groups 302 and then assign game play records sequentially from the randomized game play records of the distribution group. The second common method for ensuring game play records are assigned in random order is to randomly assign game play records from an ordered distribution group of game play records.
Rather than separate distribution and collection components,
The example distribution/collection component 315 shown in
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the invention may be embodied in many arrangements other than the illustrative arrangements shown in
An assignment component according to the present invention such as assignment component 301 shown in
The flowchart shown in
As shown at process block 402 in
It will be appreciated that prior to the distribution of distribution groups 302 as indicated at process block 402, the original distribution groups must first be created in some suitable fashion. For example, a component may create a game set 319 of game play records 303 representing a lottery game, and then divide the game set into distribution groups 302. The component that creates such game sets may be separate from the present gaming system or included in the present gaming system. In some preferred forms of the invention, a game set may include a large number of game play records, such as 50,000 for example, and the distribution groups may include only a small fraction of this total number of game play records, 1000 to 5000 for example. However, it is possible within the scope of the invention that the distribution groups themselves may represent an entire game set for a lottery game. That is, it is not a requirement of the invention that original distribution groups 302 comprise only subsets of a larger set of game records making up a lottery game.
The original distribution groups 302 may each be formed from a random selection of game play records from the game set, or each of the original distribution groups may be formed to meet some standard or set of standards such as some predefined distribution of game play records from the game set. For example, original distribution groups may be formed so that each one includes a single game play record correlating to a grand prize, 10 game play records each correlating to second prizes, and so forth. However, a particular result distribution need not be predefined for an original distribution group. Rather, by selecting game play records for an original distribution group 302 at random from a game set, the original distribution group will naturally exhibit some mathematically determinable distribution of results based on the frequency of various results in the game set from which a distribution group may be created.
The step of sending distribution groups 302, 302N to an assignment component as indicated at process block 402 is preferably performed by a suitable distribution component which may be a separate component in a gaming system according to the invention or implemented with some other component such as the combined distribution/collection component 315 shown in
The manner in which a distribution group 302, 302N may be sent to an assignment component as indicated at process block 402 will depend upon the particular architecture of the gaming system. For example, where a distribution component and assignment component are implemented in a single data processing device, the step of sending a distribution group to the assignment component may include moving the file or files representing the distribution group to a different storage location accessible to the data processing device or may simply include notifying the assignment component that the particular distribution group is available for use in assigning game play records. However, when the distribution component and assignment component are implemented in separate processing devices, such as in the arrangement shown in
Game play records are preferably assigned from a distribution group as indicated at process block 403 in response to a game play request initiated at a player station such as a player station 103 included in the gaming systems shown in
Determining whether a collection condition is met for a particular distribution group 302, 302N as indicated at decision block 404 in
The collection of unassigned game play records indicated at process block 405 is preferably performed by a separate collection component or a collection component that is combined with some other system component such as at the combined distribution/collection component 315 shown in
The collection component (such as the component embodied at component 315 in
The step of creating a new distribution group 302N and verifying for an allocation requirement as indicated at process block 406 in
The present invention also encompasses generating new distribution groups 302N using collected, unassigned game play records together with game play records that have not been distributed in a distribution group. For example, collected game play records may be added in to an original distribution group 302. In this case the collected game play records may be added randomly without regard to the result associated with the collected game play records, or they may be added to meet some allocation requirement for the resulting distribution group. In any case, where collected game play records are added to an original distribution group, the collected game play records may be shuffled at random locations in the original distribution group, added as a block of game play records at the beginning or end of the original distribution group, or incorporated into the original distribution group in any other suitable fashion.
It should be noted that there is no requirement in the present invention that game play records from a given lottery game only be grouped with other such records from that lottery game to form a new distribution group 302N. A new distribution group according to the invention may include game play records from two or more different lottery games. Where collected, unassigned game play records are added to an original distribution group for redistribution, the collected game play records may be added to an original distribution group for the same lottery game in which the collected game play records are included or for a different lottery game.
An allocation requirement according to the invention may be defined such that the resulting new distribution group will imitate an original distribution group for a given lottery game. For example, where original distribution groups for a given lottery game require a specific distribution of game result levels, the allocation requirement may be defined as that same distribution of game result levels. As another example, where there is no specific result level distribution required for an original distribution group, simply randomly selecting results for the original distribution groups will result in a natural characteristic result level distribution in the new distribution groups. An allocation requirement within the scope of the invention may be defined as this natural result level distribution. This characteristic may be expressed as, for example, 0-1 grand prize results per m number of game play records in the distribution group, 0-3 second prize level results per m, 1-20 third prize level results per m, and so forth. In any case, requiring that the standard for an original distribution group 302 be equal or similar to the allocation requirement for new distribution group results in the new distribution groups being indistinguishable from original distribution groups in terms of result level content.
It should also be noted that the invention does not require that each distribution group, either an original distribution group 302 or a new distribution group 302N, include the same number of game play records. For example, a new distribution group 302N created as indicated a process block 406 may include a number of game play records substantially less than the number of game play records included in an original distribution group 302. On the other hand, a new distribution group 302N may contain more game play records than an original distribution group.
The process of making a new distribution group 302N available for distribution to an assignment component as indicated at process block 407 preferably includes transferring or communicating the new distribution group from the component that created the new distribution group to the distribution component. Of course, where the distribution component and collection component are combined in a common processing system as indicated by component 315 in
The collection component that is responsible for collecting unassigned game play records as indicated at process block 405 and the component for creating new distribution groups, or some other component in the system, preferably maintains a history table such as the table shown at reference numeral 324 in
The above described preferred embodiments are intended to illustrate the principles of the invention, but not to limit the scope of the invention. Various other embodiments and modifications to these preferred embodiments may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/184,630, filed Jul. 19, 2005, and entitled “Electronic Lottery System For Increasing The Usage of Tickets In A Lottery Game,” now U.S. Pat. No. 7,850,517. The Applicants claim the benefit of this application under 35 U.S.C. §120. The entire content of this application is incorporated herein by this reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11184630 | Jul 2005 | US |
Child | 12942711 | US |