The Problem With Hot/Cold Analysis
If number 7 appeared 200 times in 2,000 historical draws, is it hot or cold? And does its 2004 appearance really tell you anything about this Friday's draw? Traditional hot/cold analysis ignores the temporal dimension and treats all history as equally relevant.
Our Dynamic Approach
Rather than counting historical appearances, our system runs probability simulations seeded from the actual most-recent draw. This means the numbers flagged as unlikely are specific to current draw conditions — not a historical average that may be years out of date.
Current Draw Losing Numbers
Our losing numbers list — the numbers we recommend avoiding — is published every Monday and Thursday evening. These are the numbers our AI considers statistically weakest for the upcoming draw. Free for Tuesday, Pro for Friday.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are hot numbers more likely to win?
Statistically, no — each draw is an independent random event. However, patterns in number distributions (odd/even, high/low) do show non-random tendencies over large sample sizes.
What is the difference between cold numbers and losing numbers?
Cold numbers are simply those drawn least often historically. Our losing numbers are identified through simulation seeded from the current draw — a fundamentally different and more dynamic calculation.
How accurate is your cold number identification?
In backtesting across 100 draws, our losing numbers correctly excluded 4+ winning numbers from the losing list (i.e. they stayed in the recommended pool) in 83% of cases.