1. Field of the Invention
In general, the present invention relates to systems and methods that implement lottery games. More particularly, the present invention relates to a novel on-line lottery game in which a player's game indicia and the lottery's game indicia are mapped to a third set of game indicia to determine the outcome of the game.
2. Description of the Related Art
Computerized gambling, lottery games and instant games, whether run by governmental or private entities, have proven to be quite popular. Participation in a game gives a person a chance to win a substantial amount of money while also allowing private parties and lottery authorities to collect monies, some of them for public or charitable purposes. When taxed, the sales from games also provide additional revenue to state and city governments.
As lotteries have become ubiquitous it has become a challenge to sustain interest and profitability. One approach to this challenge is to expand game content. As known, a typical lottery game correlates a player's game indicia to the lottery's game indicia to determine the number of “matches” for determining game winners. This paradigm has become stagnant. New games are needed to rekindle player interest, in particular, games that facilitate a transition to higher prices. Such games at higher prices should be more substantial as to justify the higher cost. However, the need for substance must be counterbalanced against overly increasing game complexity and player confusion, which could actually cause player disinterest. Thus, lottery games are sought that are more engaging, involving, and, thus, entertaining, and yet remain broadly accessible. It is thus to such a game that the present invention is primarily directed.
In the inventive lottery game, two sets of indicia are correlated. This correlation is then mapped to a third set of game indicia, the “outcome,” upon which prizes are based.
In one embodiment, the lottery game method includes the steps of a game player selecting a wager amount for a game, providing the player a first set, second set and third set of game objects. Then the method continues with determining a first sequence from the first set of objects, determining a second sequence from the second set of objects; correlating the first and second sequences; and mapping the correlation to a third sequence from the third set of objects. Then the method concludes with awarding prizes based on the third sequence of objects.
In other embodiments, this invention is integrated with other lottery games, such as raffles and permutation games, to allow for higher price points and to enrich the player experience.
Other objects, advantages, and features of the invention will become apparent after the hereinafter set forth Brief Description of the Drawings, Detailed Description of the Invention, and Claims appended herewith.
In a preferred embodiment, the invention comprises a system and method of implementing a lottery game having the following components: (1) three finite sets of objects: S1, S2, S3, (2) a sequence of objects from S1, (3) a sequence of objects from S2, (4) a process or rule that correlates these sequences, and (5) a process or function that maps this correlation into S3.
The general scenario is that there exist three finite sets of objects known to the player. A 1st sequence from a first set of objects S1 is produced by the player selecting the sequence, the lottery selecting the sequence, or a combination of both. A 2nd sequence from a second set of objects S2 is produced by the player selecting the sequence, the lottery selecting the sequence, or a combination of both. A ticket is issued memorializing the player's selections and none, some, or all of the lottery's selections, depending on the embodiment. Once determined, the 1st sequence (from S1) and the 2nd sequence (from S2) are correlated. An example of a correlation would be that each term in the 1st sequence is identified with the term in the same relative position in the 2nd sequence. For example, if a1a2 . . . an is the sequence in S1 and b1b2 . . . bn is the sequence in S2 the resulting correlation could be the set of ordered pairs: (a1, b1) (a2, b2) . . . (an, bn).
There is a process or a function that maps the correlation of the two sequences to a third set of objects, S3. This function may be general knowledge or it may be disclosed to the player on his ticket and vary per play. The function may be defined by a matrix displayed on the ticket for which the entries are elements of the third set S3, and where each element in S1 is identified with a row and each element in S2 is identified with a column. The matrix assigns an ordered pair (a, b) the entry in row a and column b. For example, the matrix may be a “Latin square,” for which each row and column have exactly one occurrence of each element of S3. This function (e.g. matrix) maps the correlation of the 1st and 2nd sequence, (e.g. a set of ordered pairs) to a sequence in S3, This sequence is the “outcome” on which prizes are based. Prizes may be based on which and how many times elements from S3 occur in the outcome. Prizes could also be determined by the order in which objects appear in the outcome.
A basic embodiment is described based on sets S1={A, B, C, D}, S2={1, 2, 3, 4}, and S3={ ♦, ♥,
}. A player indicates a sequence from S1 by use of a playslip 10 in
The matrix assigns each of these ordered pairs the element in S3 referenced by that ordered pair. For example, the matrix assigns (B, 2) the object in row B-column 2, which is . (The matrix in this example is a “Latin Square”) The resulting sequence in S3 is
♥
the “outcome.” Prizes are awarded based on the prize table in
s in the outcome, the player wins the prize for 4 of a kind, which is $2.
In another embodiment, let S1={A, B, C, D}, S2={1, 2, 3, 4}, and S3= ♦, ♥,
as in the above embodiment. The player chooses two distinct elements from S1 using a playslip 30 as illustrated in
. The prize table based on a $1 wager is illustrated in
The current invention can be combined with other lottery games to enhance the play value. In one embodiment, this invention is integrated with a raffle game. This embodiment coincides with a sports tournament in which there are thirty-two teams competing over several weeks, for example, as is done in the World Cup Soccer tournament held every four years. We let S1={A, B, C, D}, S2={1, 2, 3, 4}, as in previously discussed embodiments. However, in this embodiment the player can choose the elements of S3 (elements 52). The player uses a playslip 50 as in
As the rows on the square are indexed by A, B, C, and D and the columns are indexed by 1, 2, 3, and 4, the grid maps the sequence (B, 4)(B,3)(D,1)(A,2)(C,3)(A,3) to BRAZIL USA BRAZIL BRAZIL BRAZIL EGYPT. This is the outcome. The prize table is indicated in
At the end of the tournament all tickets whose predominate team placed in the tournament are entered into the raffle. More precisely, the lottery filters out all records for winning tickets for which the predominate team placed 1st, 2nd, or 3rd. These records are entered into a raffle in which one or more prizes are awarded. Either physical tickets are produced or the raffle is conducted electronically as with a random number generator. The fact that the player was able to select the four teams represented on their ticket (i.e. S3) involved strategy: the more likely one of their teams were to place in the tournament, the more likely he will be included in the raffle.
Another example of this invention is incorporated with a digits game shown in
At a scheduled time, such as a daily event, the lottery draws a sequence of six terms from S2. For this example, suppose the sequence is 836294. On the ticket 90 in
Prizes are as described in the prize tables in
Popular throughout lotteries are 3-digit and 4-digit permutation games. In one embodiment, this invention provides an extension game to existing digit games. For $5, a player receives a $1 3-digit game, a $1 4-digit game and a $3 extension game based on the current invention. The player places a $1 3-digit bet and $1 4-digit bet, which is memorialized on a ticket 120 as in
The additional game displays a 5 by 5 matrix 132 for which the rows are identified with letters A through E and for which the first column is identified with digits 1 and 6, second column is identified with digits 2 and 7, the third column is identified with digits 3 and 8, the fourth column is identified with digits 4 and 9, and the fifth column is identified with digits 5 and 0. The matrix is a Latin square based on the dollar values $7, $8, $9, $10, and $50. From ticket to ticket, the Latin square may be constant or random. (That is, given 5 symbols, a 5 by 5 Latin square can be chosen uniformly from the set of all possible Latin squares.)
Displayed on the ticket 130 are the player's 7 digits from the 3-digit and 4-digit games, each randomly paired with one of the letters A through E. Also, displayed is a random sequence of 7 letters from the set {A, B, C, D, E} not yet paired with digits. The lottery conducts the 3 digit and 4 digit draws at the scheduled time determining whether or not and how much he wins in the 3-digit and 4-digit games. For the additional inventive game, the player pairs each of the unpaired 7 letters on the ticket with the corresponding digits from the draw. Suppose the lottery's draw is 926 for the 3-digit game and 8364 for the 4 digit. As indicated in
Note in the previous embodiment, the 1st sequence is B, C, A, D, C, A, E, B, A, C, E, E, B, D form the first set S1={A, B, C, D, E} and the 2nd sequence is 5, 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 3, 9, 2, 6, 8, 3, 6, 4 from the second set S2=0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 0}. The sequence of letters in S1 that comprised the row positions for the ordered pairs was assigned to the player by the lottery. The sequence of digits in S2 was chosen by both the player and the lottery (the first 7 by the player and the 2nd 7 by the lottery). In the current invention, depending on the embodiment, one, the other, or both the player and the lottery may participate in choosing the sequences in S1 and S2.
The foregoing descriptions present only exemplary embodiments. Those of ordinary skill in the art will readily recognize that the invention may be applied to a wide range of sports tournament structures and that even within a given tournament structure many variations are possible by adjusting the assignment of points to participants, for example by awarding more points for matches won in the later rounds of the tournament. Moreover, the invention may be applied to any reality-based event, sporting or otherwise, that results in the partition of a plurality of participants into a plurality of categories, where the plurality of participants within each category is known in advance. These applications and variations thereof are contemplated as being within the scope of the present invention.
While there has been shown a preferred and alternate embodiments of the present invention, it is to be understood that changes can be made in the form and numbering of the elements without departing from the underlying scope of the invention as set forth in the claims. Further, elements are assumed to include the plural unless otherwise explicitly defined.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/617,824, filed Oct. 11, 2004, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated herein by this reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60617824 | Oct 2004 | US |