Abstract
This applied study examines the Caribbean Lucky Pick 5/28 lottery using the Sirius Code framework and the Victoria-Nash Asymmetric Equilibrium (VNAE). By employing partial coverage with concentrated density and a strategically fixed subset of 11 numbers, the study demonstrates a mathematically positive expectation across 100 consecutive draws. Results reveal significant profitability even under conservative assumptions, reinforcing the replicability of the method. The findings challenge the conventional notion of lotteries as purely negative expectation games and invite the academic community to delve deeper into stochastic environments in which structured strategies can generate asymmetric advantages.