Colorado Lotto+ Results – Saturday, December 6, 2025
Main Colorado Lotto+ – $1.5 Million Jackpot
Winning Numbers: 61214172022
First Look: This Draw Is “Boring” – and That’s Exactly Why It Matters
Tonight’s Colorado Lotto+ draw looks tame at first glance: all numbers sit in the lower half of the pool, no eye-catching sequences like 1-2-3, and nothing that screams “rigged” or “impossible.” But that apparent simplicity hides a few statistically interesting wrinkles that most casual players will miss.
- All low numbers (1–22 only): Every ball is in the lower half of the standard 1–40 style range. That’s not impossible, just slightly less common than a mix of low and high.
- Even-heavy spread: 6, 12, 14, 20, 22 are even; only 17 is odd. A 5-even / 1-odd split is a minority pattern in random draws.
- No obvious clustering, but tight band: The numbers are spread between 6 and 22, a 17-number span, skipping the higher 20s and 30s entirely.
Mathematically, this set is just as likely as any other 6-number combination. But from a behavioral standpoint, it’s exactly the sort of configuration many players avoid—which has real consequences for how a jackpot, like tonight’s $1.5 million, would be shared if someone hit it.
Pattern Breakdown of 6-12-14-17-20-22
Odd–Even Composition
Drawn set: 6, 12, 14, 17, 20, 22
- Odds: 17 (1 number)
- Evens: 6, 12, 14, 20, 22 (5 numbers)
Most random draws tend to cluster closer to a 3–3 or 2–4 odd-even split. A 1–5 split is on the edge of normal—but still well within expectation over many draws. It’s not a red flag; it’s a reminder that “balanced” tickets aren’t magically better, just psychologically more comfortable.
Low–High Distribution
All numbers tonight fall between 6 and 22. If you mentally divide the pool into low (1–20) and high (21+), you get:
- Low (1–20): 6, 12, 14, 17, 20 (5 numbers)
- High (21+): 22 (1 number)
Again, this is not impossible—just less common than a more mixed spread. Many players try to “balance” their tickets across the entire range, meaning combinations skewed heavily low or heavily high are underplayed in the real world.
Gaps & Clustering
- Smallest gap: 12–14 (gap of 2), 20–22 (gap of 2)
- Largest gap: 6–12 (gap of 6)
- No consecutive pairs (like 14–15 or 20–21)
This draw is notable for having no true consecutive numbers and no large empty desert in the middle. It’s a moderately compact, low-range set—exactly the type of line many players don’t choose because it “feels wrong.”
Colorado Lotto+ Extra (Plus) Numbers
Plus Draw Numbers: 589122325
Why the Plus Set Is More “Human-Looking” Than the Main Draw
The Plus set quietly mirrors what a lot of players think a “good” line should look like:
- Better odd-even balance: 5, 9, 23, 25 (4 odds) vs. 8, 12 (2 evens).
- Low-to-mid spread: 5 up to 25—again, no extremes, but a slightly wider range than the main draw.
- Mild clustering: 8–9 and 23–25 show small pockets of closeness that feel intuitive.
If you compare the two results side by side, the Plus line looks more like what players intentionally pick, while the main Lotto+ line looks like what an unbiased machine would spit out without caring how “balanced” it appears.
What This Draw Says About Player Behavior (Not Just Probability)
Every 6-number combination has the same raw odds. That’s the part lottery commissions emphasize. What they don’t emphasize is this: some combinations are played far more often than others, which changes your odds of keeping a jackpot to yourself.
Tonight’s main draw—6-12-14-17-20-22—is the kind of line that tends to be underrepresented in player selections because:
- It’s skewed low and even-heavy, which feels “unbalanced.”
- It lacks birthdays-style picks (no 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 11, etc. that people favor).
- There’s no obvious pattern like all multiples of 5 or pretty diagonals on a playslip.
If a single ticket hits this combination, there’s a decent chance it won’t be split with a crowd. Contrast that with “popular” patterns (1-2-3-4-5-6, repeating tens, birthdays), which are overplayed and notorious for splitting jackpots when they do hit.
Expert Insight: Smart Coverage vs. Crowded Numbers
Don’t waste time trying to predict the next Colorado Lotto+ draw. You can’t. What you can control is how many people you’re likely to share a win with.
Smart Coverage Strategy for Colorado Lotto+
- Avoid obvious patterns: Straight lines on the playslip, all multiples of 5, or novelty sets like 1-2-3-4-5-6 are crowd magnets. They don’t reduce your odds of hitting—but they absolutely increase your odds of splitting.
- Lean into “uncomfortable” mixes: Combinations that look slightly odd—like tonight’s 5-even/1-odd main draw—are less frequently chosen. That doesn’t make them more likely to be drawn, but it does make them less likely to be duplicated by other players.
- Don’t cap yourself at 31: Birthday-based picking keeps most players in the 1–31 range. Regularly include numbers above 31 to escape the birthdate crowd.
- Use tools for coverage, not prediction: A good analyzer can help you avoid repeats of overly popular structures across tickets. Treat it like portfolio diversification, not a crystal ball.
If you’re also playing national games like Powerball or Mega Millions, the same logic applies: focus on unique, uncrowded combinations, not myth-based “hot” and “cold” numbers. For deeper tools and historical pattern breakdowns, explore NichebrAI’s Powerball Pro, Mega Millions Pro, or the full analytics suite at NichebrAI Plans.
Myth Check: Was This Colorado Lotto+ Draw “Too Simple” to Be Random?
No. A line like 6-12-14-17-20-22 feels plain, but so does 3-7-19-28-31-39 once you strip the emotion away. The real statistical anomalies are things like:
- Perfect sequences (e.g., 10-11-12-13-14-15)
- All numbers from a very tight band (e.g., 1–6 only)
- Repeated identical draws across separate dates
Tonight’s result doesn’t hit any of those extremes. It’s mildly lopsided in odd/even and low/high, but still entirely consistent with a fair, random process.
Bottom Line for December 6, 2025
- The $1.5 million Colorado Lotto+ jackpot was driven by a draw that looks “plain” but is behaviorally underplayed.
- The Plus numbers form a more typical, human-like pattern—balanced, familiar, and more likely to be chosen by players.
- Your edge is not in predicting the next line—it’s in avoiding the crowd when a winning line finally does land on your ticket.
If you’re serious about treating lotteries like a numbers game rather than superstition, start tracking how you pick, not just what you pick. Then use analytical tools—like NichebrAI’s Powerball and Mega Millions platforms—to apply the same discipline across every game you play.
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