Combos Which Have NOT Fallen This Year 2026
6-Way (singles)
029 035 037 039 046 057 138 156 179 235 237 239 256 358 359 378 389 456 457 459 468 478 569 579 689
3-Way (doubles)
008 011 022 055 088 112 116 144 155 166 177 199 223 225 228 233 244 255 266 277 288 335 336 338 339 366 399 445 448 449 455 466 499 556 557 577 588 599 667 668 688 699 778 788 799 889 899
1-Way (trips)
000 111 222 333 444 555 666 999
I usually wait until mid-year to start watching this workup, but I got very curious about whether or not all the repeats were affecting this. Just for fun, I did the exact same workup using the data from 10 years ago, 2016, to see how it compares. Not scientific, but I was curious to see how the char ts from a decade ago stacked up against the current charts.
So, here are exact same charts from 2016:
Combos Which Had NOT Fallen This Time in 2016
1-Way (singles)
014 017 025 026 029 036 038 045 056 057 127 145 169 178 235 238 347 348 349 367 378 456 459 579 689
3-Way (doubles)
001 003 004 007 009 088 112 115 116 117 118 133 144 155 177 223 224 225 227 244 255 277 288 299 336 337 338 339 344 355 377 446 448 455 466 477 488 556 557 667 669 688 779 899
1-Way (trips)
111 222 333 444 666 777 888 999
Those charts are so similar that I am compelled to believe that repeats are no more prevalent now in 2026 than they were in 2016.
In the BBC Radio production of The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, when the Infinite Improbability Drive spaceship comes out of infinite improbability drive and returns to normal, the spaceship computer announces, "We have normalcy. Anything you cannot deal with now is therefore your own problem." Enough said, I think.