Lotomania 2927 e Quina 7032 divulgam resultados; próximos sorteios têm prêmios de R$ 9 mi e R$ 2 mi

The odds of winning the top prize stand at one in 11.372 million
Lotomania's jackpot probability remains unchanged regardless of how many tickets are sold or how many draws occur.

Duas vezes por semana, milhões de brasileiros depositam esperança em números sorteados pela Caixa Econômica Federal — e na noite desta sexta-feira, essa esperança se renovou sem se realizar. Nem a Lotomania 2927 nem a Quina 7032 encontraram um ganhador do prêmio máximo, fazendo com que os acumulados sigam crescendo rumo aos próximos sorteios. É o ritmo familiar da loteria: a fortuna adia sua visita, mas nunca cancela o encontro.

  • Nenhum apostador acertou os vinte números da Lotomania 2927 nem os cinco da Quina 7032, mantendo os jackpots acumulados para os próximos concursos.
  • Na Lotomania, dois apostadores chegaram perto — acertando dezenove números — e dividiram prêmios de R$153.727 cada, enquanto mais de 22 mil pessoas ganharam valores menores.
  • Na Quina, dezessete apostadores acertaram quatro números e levaram R$17.327 cada, mas o prêmio principal segue intocado.
  • O próximo sorteio da Lotomania (concurso 2928) acontece na segunda-feira com prêmio estimado em R$9 milhões, e a Quina 7033 ocorre no sábado com R$2 milhões em jogo.
  • Ambos os sorteios são transmitidos ao vivo pelo canal oficial da Caixa no YouTube, mantendo a tradição de transparência pública dos resultados.

A Caixa Econômica Federal divulgou na noite desta sexta-feira os resultados de dois de seus jogos mais populares — e nenhum deles premiou o apostador mais sortudo. No concurso 2927 da Lotomania, realizado no Espaço da Sorte em São Paulo, nenhum participante acertou os vinte números sorteados. Os mais próximos foram dois apostadores com dezenove acertos, cada um premiado com R$153.727,20. Nos escalões seguintes, 99 pessoas levaram R$1.941 com dezoito acertos, e dezenas de milhares de apostadores receberam valores menores conforme o número de acertos diminuía. Os números sorteados foram: 68, 78, 44, 60, 57, 06, 53, 11, 51, 04, 91, 69, 45, 29, 03, 46, 76, 67, 84 e 31.

A Lotomania funciona três vezes por semana, com sorteios às 20h no horário de Brasília. O apostador escolhe cinquenta números de cem disponíveis, e pode recorrer a recursos como a Surpresinha — seleção aleatória pelo sistema — ou a Teimosinha, que repete os mesmos números em sorteios consecutivos. A probabilidade de acertar os vinte números é de uma em 11,372 milhões. O próximo concurso, o 2928, ocorre na segunda-feira com prêmio estimado em R$9 milhões.

No mesmo sorteio, a Quina também não encontrou seu grande vencedor. No concurso 7032, nenhum apostador acertou os cinco números — 48, 05, 49, 71 e 28. Dezessete pessoas acertaram quatro números e ganharam R$17.327,35 cada; 2.252 acertaram três e receberam R$124,57; e mais de 60 mil apostadores embolsaram R$4,64 ao acertar dois números.

A Quina opera de segunda a sábado, com apostas a partir de R$3 para cinco números. Quem quiser aumentar as chances pode marcar até quinze números, reduzindo as odds de uma em 24 milhões para uma em 8.005 — mas ao custo de R$7.507,50 por aposta. O próximo sorteio, concurso 7033, acontece no sábado às 20h, com prêmio estimado em R$2 milhões.

Brazil's state lottery operator, Caixa Econômica Federal, released results Friday evening for two of its most popular games, and neither produced a jackpot winner. The Lotomania draw for contest 2927 took place at the Espaço da Sorte in São Paulo, with twenty numbers drawn from a pool of one hundred. No one matched all twenty. Two bettors came closest, correctly selecting nineteen numbers and splitting a prize of R$153,727.20 each. The next tier down—eighteen correct numbers—saw ninety-nine winners claim R$1,941 apiece. As the prize tiers descended, the number of winners climbed steeply: 624 people won R$307.94 for seventeen matches, 3,993 won R$48.12 for sixteen, and 17,740 won R$10.83 for fifteen. The game also rewards players who match zero numbers, though none did this time either. The twenty numbers drawn were: 68, 78, 44, 60, 57, 06, 53, 11, 51, 04, 91, 69, 45, 29, 03, 46, 76, 67, 84, and 31.

Lotomania operates three times weekly—Monday, Wednesday, and Friday—with draws beginning at 8 p.m. Brasília time. A basic ticket costs three reais, and players select fifty numbers from the hundred available on the betting slip. The game offers flexibility: bettors can let the system choose randomly through a feature called Surpresinha, repeat the same numbers across multiple consecutive draws via Teimosinha, or use Aposta-Espelho to automatically play the fifty numbers they didn't originally select. The odds of winning the top prize—matching all twenty numbers—stand at one in 11.372 million, the same probability as matching zero.

The next Lotomania drawing, contest 2928, is scheduled for Monday at 8 p.m., with an estimated jackpot of nine million reais. Tickets can be purchased at lottery retailers or through electronic channels operated by Caixa.

The same evening, Caixa also drew the Quina lottery, contest 7032, which operates on a different structure. Players select five numbers from eighty available, and the game awards prizes for matching two, three, four, or all five. Friday's draw produced no five-number winners. Seventeen bettors matched four numbers and won R$17,327.35 each. The next prize level—three correct numbers—went to 2,252 winners earning R$124.57 apiece. A much larger group, 60,372 people, matched two numbers and received R$4.64 each. The five numbers drawn were: 48, 05, 49, 71, and 28.

Quina runs six days a week, Monday through Saturday, with draws at 8 p.m. A minimum ticket costs three reais for the basic five-number selection. Players can mark between five and fifteen numbers if they wish to increase their odds, though higher selections cost more. The system also offers Surpresinha for random selection and Teimosinha for playing the same numbers across three, six, twelve, eighteen, or twenty-four consecutive draws. For a simple five-number bet, the probability of winning the jackpot is one in 24.040 million. A player willing to mark the maximum fifteen numbers—at a cost of R$7,507.50—improves those odds to one in 8,005.

The next Quina drawing, contest 7033, takes place Saturday at 8 p.m., with an estimated prize pool of two million reais. Both lotteries are broadcast live on Caixa's official YouTube channel, allowing players to watch the draws in real time.

The probability of matching all twenty numbers in Lotomania is one in 11.372 million, the same as matching zero
— Caixa Econômica Federal
For a Quina player marking the maximum fifteen numbers, the probability of winning the jackpot improves to one in 8,005
— Caixa Econômica Federal
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

Why does it matter that no one won the jackpot in either game?

Model

It doesn't matter much to the lottery operator—the money rolls forward. But it matters to the next set of players, because the prize pool grows. Nine million reais in Lotomania, two million in Quina. That's what draws people in.

Inventor

So these games are designed to have frequent small winners and rare big ones?

Model

Exactly. You'll almost never match all twenty numbers in Lotomania, or all five in Quina. But you might match fifteen or four, and you'll win something. It keeps people playing.

Inventor

How many people are actually winning money on any given draw?

Model

Thousands. In Lotomania 2927 alone, nearly 22,000 people won something. In Quina, over 62,000. But the amounts are small—a few reais for most of them.

Inventor

What's the appeal, then, if most winners get so little?

Model

The hope. You pay three reais and you might win three thousand, or three million. The math says you won't, but the possibility is there. And the small wins keep you in the game.

Inventor

These draws happen multiple times a week. Is that intentional?

Model

Yes. Lotomania three times, Quina six times. The more frequently you draw, the more chances people feel they have. It's part of the design.

Inventor

What about the people who match zero numbers in Lotomania—they win too?

Model

They do, though no one did this time. It's unusual. It rewards the people who got everything wrong, which sounds strange until you realize it's another way to keep people engaged. You can't lose completely.

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