Casino Arizona Keno Results

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The Most Common Numbers in Keno Keno is a gambling game very similar to bingo or lotto. While it was originally played in China, keno made its way to the US around the mid-19th century and became very popular. Today, you can play keno in almost every US state that allows this type of gambling. Reviews on Keno in Phoenix, AZ - Gila River Hotels & Casinos - Lone Butte, Desert Diamond Casino West Valley, Gila River Hotels & Casinos - Vee Quiva, Talking Stick Resort, Gila River Hotels & Casinos - Wild Horse Pass, Fort McDowell Casino, Organ Stop Pizza, Casino Arizona, Restaurant Sinaloa, Ak-Chin Pavilion. Desert Diamond Casinos & Entertainment is proud to announce that it is first casino in Arizona to offer Keno Cloud, a convenient high-tech way for guests to watch live Keno drawings and review past results. Desert Diamond Casinos’ new Keno Cloud service brings the excitement right to your fingertips with unique electronic tools available.

Today, you can play keno in almost every US state that allows this type of gambling. You can choose to purchase a ticket at your local keno retailer, or you can find the game in a casino, either land-based or online.

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In this article, we will be talking about the most common numbers in Keno, the mathematical chances of winning in a keno game, and the numbers people usually choose. Let’s start!

Which Numbers Do People Usually Choose when Playing Keno?

Everybody has their own lucky numbers. Whether it’s an important date in your life, like a birthday or an anniversary, or just some numbers that you consider to be your lucky ones, people usually have a lot of superstitions when playing keno.

This works both ways, as players also often avoid specific numbers. The numbers 6, 13, and 66 are generally considered bad luck, so people stay away from those in most cases. But in China, for example, people often choose the number 6 because it represents wealth, number 8 that is also connected to wealth and prosperity, and number 9 that stands for the Chinese emperor. In the US, number 7 is considered a lucky one, and because keno numbers go up to 80, people also often pick 77.

But do the numbers that you choose actually matter? Are there numbers that get drawn more frequently than others?

Most Frequent Winning Numbers

hot, while the ones that have a lower frequency of occurrence are referred to as cold.

While you can base your guesses on the frequency of numbers in previous draws, nothing guarantees you a win. The fact that some numbers get drawn more frequently than others is the product of pure randomness. While many keno players believe in the hot/cold strategy, that is rarely going to be beneficial to them.

This is also referred to as the Gambler’s Fallacy. People tend to believe that if a certain number comes up more frequently that it’s more likely to come up again, when in reality, all numbers have an equal chance to get drawn despite of the previous draws.

Nevertheless, Keno has 80 numbers, and their draws are not always evenly distributed. One website from New Zealand calculated that the number 27 is the most common Keno number in that country, being drawn 25.74% of the time. Close behind is number 12 with 25.65%. The number 17 seems to be rarest, as it only showed up 23.70% of the time, or 343 times less than the “hot” 27.

In the last 14 years of Keno draws in Hungary, statistics show that the most common pairs are 47 and 66. The number 47 also shows 9 more times in combination with other numbers in the top 20 pairs list. Interestingly enough, 1 and 2 are the second most frequent pair in Keno draws in Hungary.

Keno stats for Washington Lottery in the US suggest that the numbers 75, 29, 53, 65, and 42 are the most common ones (at the time of this post).

Arizona

So, as you see, there’s not much of a rule when it comes to Keno numbers. Some are more frequent than others, sure, but not by that much.

The Math Behind Keno

The chances of you guessing one number out of 80 are 0.25%, which makes keno one of the most difficult gambling games to win. Depending on how and under which rules you play the game, the casino edge for keno can be between 40% and a massive 70%.

If you’re playing keno through the state lottery, the numbers will get picked from a rotating drum. Keno balls are all the same, which eliminates any chances that some numbers have a better probability to get drawn than others.

If you’re playing the game in an online casino, instead of the drum, the game will use a random number generator for the draws. That is a computer-based system that doesn’t use any recognizable patterns for drawing numbers. If a game is RNG-certified, that guarantees that the outcomes are fair to all players.

If you’re hoping for the highest payout in keno, which is guessing 10 out of 10 numbers, you should know that the chances for that happening are one in 10 million, making keno one of the most unlikely gambling games in which you could win a jackpot.

The calculations further show that the best chance of winning money back in keno is by playing the 6-spot game where the house edge is around 43%. On the other hand, playing the 10-spot game will increase the casino edge to 70%, making it the most difficult type of keno.

Tips and Strategies for Playing Keno

Keno is based entirely on luck, as you can’t predict which numbers get drawn, although that may be contrary to your beliefs and superstitions.

Keno doesn’t require any skills whatsoever. Even if you played the game for years and never won, all players will have the same chances of winning as you with every new draw.

Don’t play keno if you’re looking to win money regularly, as there’s no such thing as a “hot streak” in this game. To be as safe as possible, play the 6-spot game since it mathematically has the highest chance of paying out.

Other than that — good luck!

Casino Arizona Keno Results

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Voting on Gambling
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Proposition 200 was on the November 5, 2002 ballot in Arizona as an initiated state statute. It was defeated.[1]

Proposition 200 would have allowed the governor to negotiate tribal gaming compacts with Native American tribes in the state to allow them to install video gaming machines in casinos on tribal lands.

Election results

Governor to Negotiate Tribal Casino Compacts
ResultVotesPercentage
No995,68685.2%
Yes 173,126 14.8%
Election results from Arizona Elections Department.

Text of measure

Below is the summary from the Legislative Council:

Proposition 200 directs the Governor to enter into tribal gaming compacts allowing Indian tribes to operate slot machines and card and table games on tribal land. Tribes would contribute 3% of 'annual net income' (defined as the annual total amount of money collected from Class III gaming, less any annual amounts paid out as prizes or paid for prizes awarded and annual labor and other operating expenses and annual interest expenses, depreciation and amortization) to the state to fund university, community college and tribal college scholarships, programs benefiting senior citizens, tribal education purposes and tribal elderly health care services. These distributions are outside the regular legislative process.

Arizona has entered into gaming compacts with 17 of the state's 21 Indian tribes. These compacts permit the tribes to operate specific gaming activities, including slot machines, that are, according to a federal court decision on appeal, illegal off of Indian reservations. These compacts begin to expire in the summer of 2003.

Proposition 200 directs the Governor to enter into a new gaming compact with each Indian tribe that requests it. All compacts must have the following provisions:

  • Term - 20 years. May be extended for an unlimited number of additional 20-year terms at the request of the tribe.
  • Facilities - Each tribe may operate 3 gaming facilities. The tribe and the Governor may agree to authorize additional facilities.
  • Games - Tribes may offer all forms of gambling legal under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act including slot machines, card and table games including blackjack, poker, roulette, craps and baccarat, wagering on horse and dog races, lottery games, bingo and keno. Each tribe may operate 1000 slot machines or the number of machines that the tribe currently operates (whichever is greater) and may operate 20 gaming tables at each facility. Tribes may offer keno games at no more than 2 facilities unless the Governor and tribe agree on a greater number. The number of slot machines allowed increases each year based on changes in the state's population.
  • Transfer provisions - Tribes may transfer a portion or all of their slot machine allotments to other tribes.
  • Revenue - Each tribe must contribute 3% of the tribe's net income from gaming to the Arizona College Scholarship and Elderly Care Fund. Monies are distributed to universities, community colleges and tribal colleges for scholarships, to programs throughout the state that benefit senior citizens and to Indian tribes to be used for educational purposes and for elderly health care services. In addition, each tribe must pay an annual fee of $500 per slot machine to the state to reimburse the state for administrative costs incurred in relation to Indian gaming.
  • Disclosure - Each tribe's contribution to the Arizona College Scholarship and Elderly Care Fund is confidential, but the Arizona Department of Gaming may make public the aggregate contributions from all tribes. The Director of the Arizona Department of Gaming also must annually disclose the amount of money collected from the tribes as administrative costs.
  • Regulation - Gaming facility operators must keep surveillance logs that are open to inspection by the Arizona Department of Gaming, but no other records are subject to Department of Gaming inspection, including financial and accounting records. Tribes must investigate reported compact or tribal gaming ordinance violations and require gaming facility operators to correct violations. Tribes must notify the Arizona Department of Gaming within 48 hours when a violation is reported. Tribes must license gaming employees who are not enrolled tribal members. Tribes must also license each manufacturer and supplier of gaming devices and each person providing gaming goods and services in excess of $50,000 in any single month. The state must certify nonenrolled tribal members who are involved in gaming or financial activities, manufacturers and suppliers of gaming devices and persons providing gaming goods and services in excess of $50,000 in any single month. The tribal gaming office is authorized to conduct investigations of compact violations. The Department of Gaming has access to tribal gaming office reports but is not authorized to conduct independent investigations.
  • Results of Statewide Expansion of Gambling - If state law changes to allow anyone other than Indian tribes to offer slot machines or card and table games for profit or if the state imposes any additional assessments related to gaming on Indian tribes, the tribes no longer have to make payments for regulatory costs or to the Arizona College Scholarship and Elderly Care Fund and the limitations on slot machines and card and table games become null and void.

[S](1534)[2][3]

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Footnotes

  1. Arizona 2002 election results
  2. NCSL ballot measure database, accessed December 31, 2013
  3. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
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