Kenó Draw Sum
The typical Kenó draw sum over the last 20 draws: average — 796.9, the most common sum is 1024, range from 667 to 1024.
median — 811 (half of the draws landed below it), spread between the records — 357.
A draw sum is all the drawn numbers added together. On the chart below every point is one Kenó draw: clicking a point marks that draw's numbers on the play field, and the cards under the chart show the average, median and spread.
Sum Dynamics Chart
Statistical Sum Analysis
Sum Statistics
Where to next
Draw sum analysis
Distribution, “sum → sum” transitions and a forecast of the next Kenó sum.
OpenSum generator
Builds Kenó combinations whose sum lands in your chosen range.
OpenMin/Max/Sum table
Minimum, maximum and sum of every Kenó draw, row by row.
OpenEvens & odds
The typical balance of even and odd numbers in Kenó draws.
OpenDraw sum questions
What do Kenó numbers usually add up to?
The archive average is 796.9, the most common sum is 1024, and all draws fell between 667 and 1024. The exact minimum, maximum and sum of every single draw are collected in a separate table.
What does the sum chart show?
Every point is one Kenó draw and the vertical axis is the sum of its numbers; multi-field lotteries get one line per field. Clicking a point marks that draw's numbers on the play field — handy for seeing what an unusually low or high sum was made of.
How do I build a combination with a target sum?
Picking numbers to hit a sum by hand is slow — the sum generator does it: set a range and it searches for random combinations that land inside it. The default range is already set to the typical values.
Is there an “optimal” sum to play?
There is no guaranteed winning sum: every combination is equally likely. But the middle of the range has a combinatorial property — there are simply more of those sums: an extremely low sum can only be made by a handful of picks from the smallest numbers. That is why winning draws cluster in the middle — just like most possible combinations.
Where can I see the sum distribution and a forecast?
The deep dive into the total draw sum — the distribution histogram, how often each sum repeats, the “which sum follows which” transitions and a heuristic forecast — lives in the extended sum analysis.