![]() It is possible that a player can win all four quarters and the whole prize pool. If you are using option 1 from above, the most common method is to give the winner of each quarter 25% of the prize pool. If using option 2 from above you will be using the numbers from the end of each game. Go to the top row of numbers and find the number 7(last digit of 17) then go to the left column of numbers and find the number 4(last digit of 14) find where these two numbers intersect on the grid and the name in that square wins the first quarter. Now is time for the fun!! Begin watching the game, at the end of each quarter/game match the last digit of each teams score with the grid.Įxample: At the end of the first quarter the team on the top line has 17 and the team listed in the left column has 14. After that is complete you will redraw the numbers, this time placing the drawn numbers in the gray square boxes in the left column, starting at the top.Įxample 1: Write the numbers 0-9 on pieces of paper and place them in a hat.Įxample 2: Get a deck of cards A through 10, the ace represents a one, the 10 represents a 0, 2-9 are face value. After determining the drawing method, draw the numbers one at a time placing the numbers from left to right starting with the first gray square box in the top row, continue across the top row until the numbers are gone. This can be done in many ways, listed below are 2 examples. Once all the squares are full it is time to set up the drawing. If you feel 25 squares is too few check out our 50 square grid or 100 square grid. Once the player pays for the squares they are to write their name in the squares of their choice. ![]() Sell each square for a set dollar amount until all squares are full, a player may buy as many squares as they wish. Print the square grid from above and place one of the teams on the top blank line and the other team on the side blank line. This size grid works great if you don't have a lot of people to play. This gives each square two chances to match each teams score. How does this vary from the normal 100 Square Grid?Įverything is the same but each square will now have two numbers in the left hand column and two numbers in the top row. But the twist here is the payout's will be determined once the series is over in accordance to how many games are played(4 games each winner gets 1/4 of the prize pool, 5 games each winner gets 1/5 ect.). This option is for the NBA Finals series, instead of paying out by each quarter, the winners will be decided by the final score of each game. If a team has a 3-0 series lead then game four could be the last game, this causes the players who are winning the squares in the first 3 quarters of the game to root for the series to be over, but the players who have not won any squares will be rooting for the series to continue. You can set this up for the NBA Finals Championship game, but the twist here is you don't know which game number that will be. These squares can also be used for any basketball game of the season. ![]() The whistle on my keychain is 3D printed and a few years old.Ī couple GPU mounts in PETG for my old mining rigs that are ~2 years old.How does this vary from the normal Super Bowl Squares?Įverything is exactly the same but you have some different options on how to run this one. I have a standalone 2kg filament holder printed out of transparent red PLA that's a few years old. ![]() All printed out of white ABS to handle the interior cabin heat in summer: A sunglasses holder behind the tablet, a J1772 locking collar, and a similar ice scraper. I have some 3D printed upgrades for my Tesla Model 3 that aren't quite a year old yet, but will likely live as long as the car. As of this moment that scraper is in the Leaf. That scraper outlasted not only that car (writeoff after accident), but the car following it as well (2013 Mazda 3 hatchback, traded in after 5 years for a Nissan Leaf). So that would be circa late 2015 I think. Hmm, the oldest thing is probably a small ice scraper that I printed in ABS for my first car, a 2012 Toyota Matrix. Non-reddit communities are listed in our getting started guide We welcome community contributions to this wiki! Related Communities Hit the report button or message the mods NEED HELP? WE HAVE A WIKI!
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