Quina 7032 acumula em R$ 2 milhões; nenhum acertou as cinco dezenas

The money doesn't disappear. It accumulates, grows heavier, waits.
The Quina jackpot rolled over after no one matched all five numbers in Friday's draw.

Na noite de sexta-feira, cinco números foram sorteados pela Quina e ninguém os acertou todos — um resultado que, na lógica das loterias, não representa ausência, mas acúmulo. O prêmio de 1,2 milhão de reais cresce para 2 milhões e aguarda o próximo sorteio, marcado para sábado, dia 23 de maio. É a natureza peculiar do jogo: a fortuna não se perde, apenas se adia, tornando-se mais pesada a cada noite sem vencedor.

  • Nenhum apostador acertou as cinco dezenas do concurso 7032 — 05, 28, 48, 49 e 71 — e o prêmio principal de R$ 1,2 milhão escapou de todos.
  • O jackpot acumula e sobe para R$ 2 milhões, criando uma tensão renovada para o sorteio de sábado, dia 23 de maio.
  • Dezessete apostadores acertaram quatro números e receberam R$ 17.327,35 cada, enquanto mais de 60 mil pessoas levaram prêmios menores — a multidão dos quase-acertos.
  • O próximo sorteio acontece às 21h no horário de Brasília, com apostas encerradas uma hora antes, mantendo o ritmo semanal de segunda a sábado.
  • O prêmio acumulado atrai novos apostadores, cada um escolhendo cinco números entre oitenta, alimentando o ciclo que só termina quando alguém finalmente acerta.

Na sexta-feira, às nove da noite, o sorteio da Quina 7032 revelou os números 05, 28, 48, 49 e 71 — e nenhum apostador no Brasil os havia marcado todos no bilhete. O prêmio de R$ 1,2 milhão não foi distribuído e, como prevê a mecânica das loterias brasileiras, o valor não some: acumula. O próximo concurso, o 7033, acontece no sábado, dia 23 de maio, com um prêmio estimado em R$ 2 milhões esperando por quem acertar.

A noite, porém, não foi de todo sem recompensas. Dezessete pessoas acertaram quatro dos cinco números e receberam R$ 17.327,35 cada. Outros 2.252 apostadores levaram R$ 124,57 ao acertar três dezenas. O grupo mais numeroso — mais de 60 mil pessoas — acertou apenas dois números e recebeu R$ 4,64, o prêmio mínimo que sustenta a esperança e mantém o jogo vivo.

A Quina sorteia seis dias por semana, sempre às 21h, horário de Brasília. As apostas custam a partir de R$ 3,00 e fecham uma hora antes do sorteio. Os draws são transmitidos ao vivo pela RedeTV! e pelos canais oficiais da Caixa no YouTube e Facebook. Retirar o prêmio depende do valor: quantias menores podem ser resgatadas em casas lotéricas ou agências da Caixa; valores maiores exigem apresentação de documentos diretamente no banco.

O sábado chega com seus R$ 2 milhões em espera. Em algum lugar do Brasil, alguém já está escolhendo cinco números, convicto de que desta vez será diferente.

Friday night at nine o'clock, the Quina lottery machine released five numbers into the world: 05, 28, 48, 49, 71. The draw for contest 7032 had been anticipated to pay out 1.2 million reais to whoever matched all five. No one did.

Instead, the jackpot sits waiting. The next drawing, scheduled for Saturday, May 23rd, will offer 2 million reais to the player or players who finally get it right. This is how lotteries work in Brazil—the money doesn't disappear. It accumulates, grows heavier, waits.

But the night wasn't entirely without winners. Seventeen people matched four of the five numbers and each received 17,327.35 reais. Another 2,252 players got three numbers correct, earning 124.57 reais each. The smallest prizes went to the largest group: 60,372 people who matched just two numbers walked away with 4.64 reais. These are the mathematics of near-misses, the consolation prizes that keep people playing.

The Quina draws six days a week, Monday through Saturday, always at nine in the evening, Brasília time. It's a rhythm as reliable as the lottery itself. Players can choose five numbers from eighty available, and the minimum bet costs three reais. The more numbers you select, the better your odds—though odds in a lottery are always long. Betting closes at eight in the evening on the day of the draw, giving people an hour to make their choice.

For those who do win, the process of claiming their prize depends on the amount. Anything up to 2,428.79 reais can be collected at any authorized lottery house or Caixa bank branch. Online players can even have smaller winnings transferred directly to their Mercado Pago account. Larger prizes require a trip to Caixa itself, with identification and the original betting receipt. Anything 10,000 reais or more arrives within two business days of presentation.

The draw itself is public. It airs live on RedeTV!, on television, and through Caixa's YouTube and Facebook accounts. Anyone can watch the numbers emerge. The previous draw, on Thursday the 21st, had produced 03, 12, 40, 56, 70. The one before that, Wednesday, was 16, 19, 24, 50, 55. The pattern continues, day after day, the same ritual of selection and chance.

Saturday's draw approaches with its 2 million reais waiting. Somewhere in Brazil, someone is choosing five numbers, hoping this time will be different. The lottery doesn't promise much—only that the game will happen again tomorrow, and the day after that, and the day after that.

The Quina draws six days a week, Monday through Saturday, always at nine in the evening, Brasília time.
— Lottery schedule information
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why does a lottery that no one won still matter enough to report?

Model

Because the money doesn't vanish. It grows. Two million reais is more compelling than 1.2 million, and that's the story—the accumulation, the weight building.

Inventor

But 60,000 people won something. Doesn't that feel like the real story?

Model

It does, but it's a different kind of story. Those are the people who came close and got paid for it. The jackpot is the story because it's the dream that didn't happen yet.

Inventor

What does it say about Brazil that people play this game six days a week?

Model

It says people want a chance. A three-real bet is small enough to feel possible, and the prize is large enough to matter. That's the whole design.

Inventor

The article mentions you can watch it live on YouTube. Does that change anything?

Model

It makes it transparent. You see the machine, you see the numbers drawn. There's no mystery about the outcome, only about whether your numbers will be among them.

Inventor

If someone won 17,327 reais, is that life-changing?

Model

For some people, absolutely. For others, it's a nice surprise. The lottery doesn't discriminate—it just pays what the rules say it pays.

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