Data, data everywhere, but not a starting point anywhere!
Hope the Pickme'ers didn't run you off.
Yes, having lots of data is cool, except it can be confusing. Like anything else you need a STARTING POINT.
You can't run a race without a starting point. You can't pay a game without a starting point, you can't do anything without a starting point.
Sometimes the data gives it to you. Sometimes it doesn't. Most often it means looking over what you have to find something you can use to get you headed in the right direction.
I keep A LOT of data. Some confusing. But it allows me to look at the same stuff from three or more different views to determine if what I am seeing is worth a second look. Another nasty piece of a chart....
The R(x) is actual numbers, not digits. So R10 denotes Return of 10, i.e., "How long has 10 been out?"
In a 4/35, there are 35 total numbers and 4 drawn in each game. At that rate, at the very minimum, it takes 9 draws to cycle through the entire 35. Doesn't happen often. So we get something like this. A chart where many numbers are out 2, 3 or more times what we expect. If you look at 27, up there at the 68, you see it stayed out 7 times as long.
Some people call numbers like 10, 15, 21, 26, cold numbers. They are confused, out of sync, they don't know what to do. They are not hitting like they should.
Sometimes this is as good a starting point as you have. I would not suggest playing all the cold numbers in one set. Mix one, maybe two, in with some hot numbers, like 17, 18, 22, 30, 32. FYI, 30, 32 is the most often hit back pair in 2Step. Its hit 27 times in 1401 live draws and 104 times overall.
Of course, I tell you not to play all your cold numbers in one line and then, one of my sets is 6, 10, 15, 19.
Figure that one out.
G