The thing with the odds is... the only real value in that is, basically nothing.
So if a $30 ticket has odds of 1:3.58 and the next one comes in at 1:3.72 there's not really
that much of a difference. Running the math out that means there are 100 winners in every 372
tickets. The older game, 100 winners in 358 tickets... not much better. 14 winning tickets difference
in 350+ tickets. About 3 winners different per book.
But that's not the whole story in terms of how good or bad a game is. The real magic is in exactly what
the expected payout is. If 99% of those 3 winners are break even wins, it's not very significant. Now
they do advertise the amount of bigger wins, but not the amount of smaller wins which make up the
overwhelming majority of winners in a games print run.
What they should do is print an entirely encompassing run of the numbers. Exactly how many tickets are
printed, exactly how many of each winner. AFAIK, they do not. Not unless it's in that HUGE complete game
rules PDF that I never read lol