Lucky 6
Lucky 6 is the lottery of the Betgames studio: the host releases numbered balls from a drum and you bet on how the draw shapes up. Back the colour of the first ball, whether the total is odd or even, how high the sum runs, and whether specific numbers come out. It is the most familiar format here for anyone who has played a national lottery, run live on camera every few minutes.
| Format | Live numbered-ball draw |
|---|---|
| Bet on | First ball, sum, odd/even, individual numbers |
| Round speed | A new draw every few minutes |
| Real money | Yes, at CasinOnline SA |
How a Draw Unfolds
Lucky 6 runs as a live numbered-ball draw. The host loads a drum and releases numbered balls one at a time every few minutes, so the round breathes a little more than the card games and gives you time to read the table before the window closes. As the balls land, the outcomes resolve in stages: the very first ball out settles its own markets, and once the full set is drawn the totals and the individual-number bets are confirmed. It is the closest BetGames game to a lottery night, with the same slow build toward a final set of numbers.
Where You Can Place a Bet
There are three families of market. The first ball stands on its own, where you can back its colour or whether it is odd or even. The total, or sum of the drawn balls, opens up over or under lines and an odd-or-even call on the combined figure. Then there are the individual numbers, where you wager on whether a specific number appears in the draw; because a single number is harder to land, these pay the most of the three. That spread lets you sit on the gentler first-ball and total markets or reach for a longer return on a chosen number.
Who It Suits
If you enjoy the rhythm of a lottery but want it to come round more often than once or twice a week, this is the natural fit. The few-minute draw rewards patience over fast reflexes, and the mix of even-money-style first-ball bets and longer individual-number bets means you can set the risk to your own taste. Backing a personal lucky number is part of the appeal, though it remains the hardest outcome and the numbers carry no memory from round to round. For a quicker version of the same idea, the Lucky 5 table uses fewer balls and a shorter wait.
Frequently asked questions
How is Lucky 6 different from a national lottery?
It uses the same numbered-ball draw format but runs every few minutes rather than on a fixed weekly schedule, and you bet on outcomes like the first ball and the total as well as individual numbers.
Which Lucky 6 bets pay the most?
Betting on whether a specific individual number is drawn pays the most, because a single number is the hardest of the markets to land.
What can I bet on for the first ball?
You can back the colour of the first ball drawn and whether it is odd or even.
How does the total market work?
The total is the combined sum of the drawn balls. You can bet over or under a line on that figure, or whether the total is odd or even.
How often does a Lucky 6 draw take place?
The host releases the numbered balls every few minutes, so a new draw comes round regularly through the session.