One person walked away with R$620,529.35
Em uma terça-feira comum, um único bilhete transformou uma combinação de cinco números em mais de seiscentos mil reais, encerrando o concurso 6898 da Quina sem acumulação e sem divisão. A sorte, quando cai sobre um só, é absoluta — e quase cinquenta mil pessoas encontraram, em prêmios menores, algum motivo para celebrar a mesma noite. A loteria segue seu ritmo semanal, oferecendo na quarta-feira uma nova janela de possibilidades para os que ainda aguardam.
- Um único apostador acertou os cinco números do concurso 6898 e levou sozinho o prêmio de R$620.529,35, sem divisão e sem acumulação.
- Outros 25 jogadores acertaram quatro números e receberam R$10.637,65 cada, enquanto 1.890 acertadores de três números embolsaram R$134 apiece.
- Quase 50.000 pessoas — 48.486 ao todo — acertaram dois números e levaram R$5,22, revelando o alcance popular da Quina em uma única noite.
- O próximo sorteio, marcado para quarta-feira, já projeta um prêmio estimado em R$600.000, mantendo o ciclo de seis concursos semanais.
Um apostador saiu vitorioso do sorteio da Quina desta terça-feira ao acertar os cinco números do concurso 6898 — 13, 32, 63, 65 e 76 — e garantir sozinho o prêmio de R$620.529,35. Sem divisão e sem acumulação, a rodada se encerrou de forma limpa para o único ganhador da faixa principal.
O sorteio, porém, distribuiu alegrias em cascata. Vinte e cinco jogadores acertaram quatro números e receberam R$10.637,65 cada. Na terceira faixa, 1.890 apostadores com três acertos levaram R$134. Já 48.486 pessoas acertaram dois números e embolsaram R$5,22 — um número que revela o apelo amplo da loteria: quase cinquenta mil pessoas tiveram algo a comemorar em uma única noite.
A Quina funciona com regras simples: o apostador escolhe entre cinco e quinze números de um universo de oitenta. Um bilhete de cinco números custa R$3 e oferece uma chance em 24 milhões. Ampliar a aposta aumenta o custo, mas melhora as probabilidades. O prêmio é distribuído por faixas, com 35% destinados aos acertadores dos cinco números.
O próximo concurso acontece na quarta-feira, com prêmio estimado em R$600.000. Para quem não celebrou na terça, a loteria — que sorteio seis vezes por semana — já prepara uma nova chance.
One person walked away from Tuesday's Quina drawing with R$620,529.35 after matching all five numbers in contest 6898. The winning combination—13, 32, 63, 65, 76—belonged to a single ticket holder, making this a clean win with no split prize. The lottery did not roll over to the next drawing.
Beyond the jackpot, the draw produced a cascade of smaller winners across the prize tiers. Twenty-five players matched four of the five numbers and each received R$10,637.65. The third tier saw 1,890 winners with three correct numbers, each collecting R$134. At the bottom rung, 48,486 people matched two numbers and took home R$5.22 apiece. These secondary prizes, while modest individually, represent the lottery's broad appeal—nearly 50,000 people found something to celebrate in a single night.
The Quina operates on a straightforward structure. Players select between five and fifteen numbers from a pool of eighty. A five-number ticket costs R$3 and carries odds of one in 24 million. As players add more numbers to their selection, the cost rises but so does the probability of winning something. A fifteen-number ticket costs R$9,009 but improves the odds to one in 8,005. The prize pool is divided by tier: 35 percent goes to those who match all five numbers, 15 percent to four-number matches, and 10 percent each to three- and two-number winners.
The lottery runs six times weekly, drawing every day from Monday through Saturday at 9 p.m. The next contest, scheduled for Wednesday, carries an estimated jackpot of R$600,000. For regular players, there are variations on the basic game. The Teimosinha option allows a single ticket to compete in three, six, twelve, eighteen, or twenty-four consecutive drawings without requiring a new purchase each time. Once yearly, near June 24th, the Quina de São João offers larger prizes than the standard weekly draws.
For those who won on Tuesday, the money is already in motion. For those who didn't, Wednesday offers another chance at the same odds and a slightly smaller prize waiting to be claimed.
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does a single jackpot winner matter enough to report?
Because it tells you the lottery didn't accumulate. The money moved. Someone's life changed in a concrete way, and the next drawing starts fresh instead of building on failure.
What's the actual likelihood someone wins the jackpot?
One in 24 million if you play five numbers. Most people never will. But 48,000 people matched two numbers on Tuesday alone. The lottery's real business is selling small hope to enormous numbers of people.
Why include all those prize tiers in a story about one winner?
Because the story isn't just about the person who won big. It's about the shape of the lottery itself—how it distributes money, how many people it touches, what the actual odds are at each level.
Does anyone actually use the Teimosinha option?
The source doesn't say. But it exists because some players want to commit to a pattern without thinking about it every week. It's a way to make hope automatic.
What happens if no one wins the jackpot?
It accumulates to the next drawing. That's when the real money appears and people start paying attention. Tuesday's winner prevented that from happening.