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No one correctly picked all six numbers in Friday night’s Mega Millions draw, setting up a record-breaking jackpot of $1.6 billion on Tuesday.
The numbers were 15, 23, 53, 65, 70 and Mega Ball 7.
The jackpot has been growing since July, when a group of California office workers won $543 million.
Tuesday’s total would eclipse the record U.S. lottery prize of $1.58 billion, given away in a Powerball jackpot drawing in 2016.

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Over the years, various lotteries have been making their games harder to win, thus leading to more bigger, attention-grabbing prizes.
Mega Millions, for example, changed its game in October 2017 by increasing the number of potential “Mega Balls” — the sixth and final ball drawn — from 15 to 25. That, and other changes decreased the chances of winning from one in 258.8 million to the current odds of one in 302.5 million.
Gary Buffone, a Florida psychologist who has counseled a handful of lottery winners over the years, said most Americans know how to handle the hype of a big lottery jackpot.
“I think for the most part, this (a big lottery jackpot) is a form of entertainment,” Buffone told NBC News on Friday. “Unfortunately there are a few people who partake in the game that can least afford to. But that’s just some, not a majority. People, in general, I think are pretty responsible.”
Mega Millions is played in 44 states, the District of Columbia and U.S. Virgin Islands.