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I'm trying hard to reconcile these two. Maybe others will draw their own conclusions...Shem said:Maybe they are just trying to recruit new members....I don't know why they would do that.
[....]
And yes, I'm an e-lotto affiliate myself and [...] enjoy earning commissions and playing both lottos for free week in week out.
Aww, really?Shem said:...it's not really a money spinner for the company.
Got any independent verification of this - I don't see any mention of elottery on [broken link removed]Shem said:The lotteries council approve it
What do you mean by 'big guys'? How big is the Lotteries Council? I don't suppose by any wild chance that you can identify this person, or will this be one of those unprovable claims that seem to pepper discussions about these schemes?Shem said:as mentioned earlier, one of the big guys who works there is an actual e-lotto affiliate himself.
Sorry - I'm lost now. Please confirm how much of the the £5 actually goes into the lottery, and how much is taken in fees/expenses/other?Shem said:I think the £5 you pay a week for one lotto is money well spent. I fail to see how it is a rip-off of any kind.
Ok, the company divides your weekly subscription fee this way. You pay £5 to play in one lottery e.g the UK Lotto. There's 49 players in a syndicate. £5 times 49 players = £245 minus the 88 lines( at £1 per line) that syndicate gets a week remains £157, minus the 50%(of total cost £245) the company pays out in commissions £157-£122.50 remains £34.50 for the company to pay for it's staff, infinity bonuses to members,
Wow - this is much, much worse than I thought - so 50% of the player's money gets 'redirected'. Why on earth would this make sense for the player? Let's be very clear - this immediately reduces by 50% the chance of winning. Why on earth would any player do this? Why wouldn't the play just put 100% of their money in the lottery and have an improved chance of winning? Or form a simple, local syndicate with family or friends and have double the chance of winning compared to eLottery?Shem said:And you just need to read the calculations again. It's pretty straight forward. When you join, you are placed in a 49 player syndicate, each member paying £5 = £245, 50% of that goes towards paying commissions to e-lotto members. That leaves £122.50. Each syndicate of 49 players gets 88 lines a week. A line for the UK Lotto costs £1 that's £88. So you subtract that from £122.50 left after deducting commissions and the company is left £34.50 from those 49 players, to cover expenses incurred by the company like wages for the staff, company meetings etc.
Hold your horses, there - You do NOT get 88 lines a week for your fiver. You get one forty-nineth share of 88 lines per week - which is less than 2 lines a week.Shem said:I see your argument there, but and a BIG BUT, for £5, you get 88 lines a week. That's 44 on Wednesday and 44 on Saturday. Now, you only need to match 5 numbers to win the jackpot with e-lottery. say the jackpot is £1 million. that will be divided amongst 49 players making approximately £20,000 for each of the 49 players. If you matched 5 numbers on your own on the uk lotto, you would win aproximately £1,000. See the difference.
Shem said:The company also gives you two free goes every week. Match five on the free go and you get £1,000.
Seems an expensive service, given that you play the [broken link removed] for standard prices - no queuing up, automatic notification of results, all those things that eLottery are creaming off the top are available at no charge.Shem said:You also don't have to queu up in the shops, plus you get results in your mailbox plus they also let you know of any winnings. You can also get to play for free by introducing five people to play. Say you are playing the uk lotto and you get five people to play the uk lotto there, you are automatically playing for free.
There is no 'win more' - the benefits of your syndicate have been cut in half by the huge fees. You win more if you start your own syndicate and treat eLottery with a 40-foot-bargepole.Shem said:So, it's clearly the better way to play. And as you can see, you not only win more as part of that syndicate,
Assuming you can find 5 suckers to pay for you, right?Shem said:you can also get to play for free.
First of all, I'd really need to see some explicit confirmation of approval (not just having VWC as members) before I'd accept this. But even if I did accept this, what does it mean? Who is the 'lotteries council'? A group of organisations who run lotteries - right? What value should I really place on their 'approval'?Shem said:Plus, you may have looked by now and as I mentioned, the lotteries council seem to approve of it.
Why do I get the feeling that you're making this up as you go along? I'm still not clear on what exactly you mean by 'two free goes' - please clarify? Is this 2 'free' lines in every draw? Are these real lines in the draw? or some 'virtual' 5-number line allocations?Shem said:No you don't share your two free goes. That's yours to keep. and if you introduced three people to play the free go, the prize money jumps up to £5000 -all for you if you match 5. Better than paying £1 on the counter huh!
Funny how the bit about sharing the jackpot is just slipped in at the end. That's the important bit - you get a one-49th share of any jackpot. So you don't get '88 lines per week' - you get 1-49th share of 88 lines.Shem said:And yes, you do get 88 lines a week for your £5. You're in a 49 player syndicate for £5, with 49 tickets. All 49 players have the same 5 numbers. If your syndicate matches the 5 numbers, you win the jackpot due to the guaranteed 6th ball number, and you share the jackpot amongst the 49 people.
C'mon rainy day, no need to stress yourself, Of course you share the jackpot with the other 49 players in your syndicate. The beauty is that you don't have to match six numbers to win the jackpot, you only need 5 with e-lottery. And it's 44 lines on saturday and 44 on wednesday making 88 lines per week for £5.RainyDay said:Funny how the bit about sharing the jackpot is just slipped in at the end. That's the important bit - you get a one-49th share of any jackpot. So you don't get '88 lines per week' - you get 1-49th share of 88 lines.
This is like nailing jelly to the ceiling. You are making it impossible to pin you down on the specifics of the programme (apart from the specific 50% of the fees that is deducted as 'expenses'). But I'll do my best to take this apart, step by step.Shem said:C'mon rainy day, no need to stress yourself, Of course you share the jackpot with the other 49 players in your syndicate. The beauty is that you don't have to match six numbers to win the jackpot, you only need 5 with e-lottery. And it's 44 lines on saturday and 44 on wednesday making 88 lines per week for £5.
Thanks for the kind offer, but hell will freeze over before I give my email address to anyone associated with this scheme/scam. I feel quite soiled having spent a little bit of time on the website trying to wade through the confusion.Shem said:And if you visit the e-lottery sight, click on the grab-a-grand for free icon, you just put in 5 numbers, you get a confirmation e-mail. If you then forward that e-mail to three other friends and they decide to have a free go as well, you don't win a grand if you match 5, instead you win five grand.
OK - so now we are finally getting to the bottom of what you meant by '2 free goes'. So it is not 2 free lines or anything like it - just some other small draw where the maximum payout is £1k. I guess when you are taking 50% of members subscription as fees, it isn't that hard to give back the odd £1k here and there.Shem said:If you a member, you get two free goes with the grab-a-grand every week. So if you match five numbers with the grab-a-grand competition, you win a grand. If you are not an e-lottery member and visit the site, you can still play grab-a-grand for free and have the option of telling three other friends and if they decide to have a go as well, your prize goes up from a grand to five grand on that draw.
Whis is unclear is your failure to recognise that allowing 50% of the subscription to be creamed off in 'fees' is not smart, from the members point of view. The member would be far better off setting up a simple syndicate with friends & family and having 100% of their subscription going into the lottery.Shem said:And i explained in a post earlier how you win more. Just go back and look at it again and tell me what isn't clear about winning more as part of an e-lottery syndicate.
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