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No jackpot winner in Mega Millions, but Florida ticket wins $4 million

Mega Millions drawing: Jackpot hist $418M
Posted at 6:28 AM, Jan 03, 2018
and last updated 2018-01-03 15:00:05-05

Another day, another huge lottery jackpot gets larger still.

There was no grand prize winner in Tuesday's Mega Millions drawing. It's the 23rd straight drawing without a jackpot winner in the game, dating back to Oct. 13. So the $361 million jackpot will grow to $418 million for Friday.

The winning numbers Tuesday were 1, 42, 47, 64 and 70, and the Mega Millions number was 22.

But while that Mega Millions jackpot just keeps getting bigger, there was a $4 million ticket that was officially sold in Florida.

There were two tickets sold that matched the five white balls from Tuesday's drawing.  One sold in Ohio was a $1 million winner, and the one sold in Florida is worth $4 million because it included the optional megaplier, which was 4 times in Tuesday's drawing.

Lottery officials say the $4 million ticket was sold in Tamarac in Broward County..

The good news is that you won't have to wait till Friday for another chance at a big prize.

The competing Powerball game will have a drawing at 11 p.m. ET Wednesday, with a $440 million jackpot at stake.

The combined total of $858 million between the two games is one of the largest combined payouts on record.

Both games offering prizes over $300 million at the same time has been rare in the past. But it's about to become more common. That's because there are now longer odds in both games, leading to less frequent jackpot winners and thus more frequent large jackpots.

The Mega Millions jackpot hasn't risen above $400 million since the summer of 2016, according to the lottery, when a winner in Indiana received a $536 million prize.

In October, Mega Millions changed the numbers that players could choose from, bringing the odds of picking all six numbers to 1 in 302.6 million, from 1 in 258.9 million under the old format. It also raised the price of a single ticket to $2.

The idea was to increase the size of the top prize. And so far, it has worked.

The move was similar to one made by Powerball in October 2015. That took the odds of winning that game from 1 in 175 million to 1 in 292 million.

Of course, if the chance of winning either game is ridiculous, the chance of winning both is ridiculous on steroids -- 1 in 88 quadrillion, or 1 in 88,412,922,115,183,000 to be precise.

If you're one of those people who do better with percentages: You have a 0.0000000000000011% chance of winning both games.

But the longer odds haven't been stopping people from buying tickets. In fact, the larger jackpots are just encouraging more sales. And Americans do love buying lottery tickets. They spent more than $80 billion on them in 2016. That's more than they spent on movies, video games, music, sports tickets and books -- combined.