Fairness

Fairness & RNG testing

Every result has to be fair and verifiable. Here's how the random number generator behind Quick Pick is tested, and how draw integrity is maintained.

Abstract visualization of secure, independently tested technology
Quick Pick

What the RNG does

When you choose Quick Pick, a random number generator (RNG) selects your five main numbers and Grand Number. A sound RNG produces results that are unpredictable, evenly distributed, and impossible to influence.

Unpredictable

Each pick is independent. Past results never change the odds of what comes next.

Evenly distributed

Over many draws, every number has the same chance of being selected. No number is "due".

Tamper-resistant

The generator runs in a controlled environment and can't be nudged by players or staff.

Independent testing

Checked by outside labs

RNGs used for lottery products are tested by independent testing laboratories. They run large statistical samples to confirm the output is genuinely random and within accepted tolerances.

  • Statistical randomness and uniformity tests
  • Review of the generator and its seeding
  • Re-testing after any material change

Oversight you can point to

In British Columbia, gaming is conducted and managed by BCLC under the Gaming Control Act (B.C.), with independent oversight from the Independent Gambling Control Office (IGCO). Daily Grand's game rules are coordinated nationally by the Interprovincial Lottery Corporation (ILC).

Draw integrity

The draw itself

Choosing your numbers and drawing the winning numbers are two separate things. Quick Pick uses the RNG; the official winning numbers are produced under set draw procedures with documented controls and witnesses.

Quick Pick decides the numbers on your line. It does not decide the winning numbers — those come from the official Daily Grand draw, run to the published Game Conditions.

Questions about fairness?

Our support team can walk you through how results are produced and verified.

Why play here

Built for trust, run by B.C.