Luck of the draw
The Powerball jackpot has grown to an eye-watering $1.5bn ahead of the draw on Saturday, the second time in history that the Powerball has broken the billion threshold.
Anyone fortunate enough to hit the jackpot would be given the option to take the full amount paid over 29 years, or a lesser one-off payment of $746m, though taxation would, of course, almost halve the lucky lotto player’s windfall.
Numbers game
Although not without its critics, the numbers game — with the ever-alluring promise of instant riches — still has a grip on many Americans, with 42% of US adults playing at least once last year. Indeed, Americans reportedly spent over $105bn on lottery tickets last year, splashing out more than they spent on books, concert and movie tickets, and video streaming services combined.
The good news for the nation’s players is that the billion-dollar prize pot is becoming more common in the US lottery landscape. Across all lotteries, the ten digit figure has been hit five times since 2016 and twice in 2022 alone, the first being the $1.34bn Mega Millions jackpot that was split by two anonymous parties over the summer.
In theory, with the odds of winning the jackpot at roughly 1-in-292-million, there is a tipping point at which buying every single $2 ticket would be worth it. Of course actually buying, filling out and then finding the winning ticket among 292 million is a lot easier said than done.