About

The man behind LottoTrix…

This website is owned and operated by Stefan Vandevelde. Stefan is a true number genius and the current world record holder of the C(49,6,2,6) covering design. That design is a lotto wheeling challenge amongst the world’s best lottery wheel designers.

Dear Friends,

Any new idea on how a major lottery jackpot is won should be taken with a big grain of salt. Hence, I am pleased that my discoveries are backed up by many of the best combinatorial researchers from around the world. So I am more than happy to announce that a major shockwave is on its way to the underbelly of the online lottery community ! I guarantee you.
History proves my point !

In the early days, lotto shows on TV were big business. Each week, millions of viewers were flocking to their TV-sets to watch the live lotto draw. That’s how tantalizing the game was in those days. And, of course, TV-networks wanted to capitalize on this (millions of viewers = advertising revenue).

Because rating figures required that a viewer watched the show for at least 15 minutes, a variety of formats were invented to broadcast the lottery draw…

One idea was to invite one local celebrity for each ball to be drawn. After a short interview, the guest was kindly invited to push a red button, and about 30 seconds later, a first winning number appeared from the barrel, followed by a tremendous applause. Then a second guest appeared on stage to draw a second winning ball, and so on…

It took about 3 minutes for each ball to be drawn, which enabled the viewers at home to actually check their tickets while the draw took place.

Guess what happened…

With the appearance of the first winning ball, many players already realized that hitting the jackpot was out of the question. In none of their plays, they ticked the first winning number.

And it got worse. The moment the second winning number rolled out of the drum, 98 % of all tickets played didn’t match any number at all, or failed to match both numbers. With 4 balls to go, only 2 % of all tickets played were still in the game. Week after week, a growing number of lottery players got discouraged and didn’t want to play anymore. Sales of lottery tickets dropped dramatically.

Nowadays, the lotto administrations got smarter. To mask the sequence of events, the draw itself is now done at dazzling speeds. It gives us the impression that the order in which the draw occurs is not important anymore. And it makes us believe that, whenever we win a small prize, we were only 2 or 3 steps away from hitting the big one.

Not so !

It is very true that the order in which a lottery draw occurs is not important, ONCE YOU MATCHED THEM ALL. But to match them all, you must follow a precise track. That track will always start with the draw of the very first winning ball. Then follows the second winning ball, and so on…

My simple but straightforward theory is a proven fact : most lottery tickets lose the jackpot at the very beginning of the draw. By consequence, tickets that survive the early stages of the draw not only have a far better chance to hit a major jackpot, they are the only ones that ever did.

Now, the real magic comes from the fact that anyone can survive the early stages of the draw. So if you’re good at trapping all the winning numbers in a bigger selection of numbers, why wouldn’t you try some of my free lottery systems ?

Feel free to have a quick look at the contents of one of my lotto books “If You can’t win the lottery then change its rules“. It’s a book that teaches you how to wheel all the numbers in a very specific way (and trap all the winning numbers as a consequence). This takes less tickets than you might think.

For those players who can’t afford to play dozens of tickets or who don’t like to play together with some friends, I developed a great SOLO-alternative. In my opinion, it’s the world’s best low-budget system on the market today. It’s called WINSLIPS and I am really proud to have created such a great lotto system. (Pssst … a secret … you can start with just one ticket. Now how cheap is that?)

Thanks for dropping by,

Stefan Vandevelde