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MATKA FRAMEWORK

The Design of the Game

Understanding how multiple variations fuse together to form a beautiful game

The Matka Framework

The Matka Framework explains how the multiple variations are fused together to form a beautiful game. This chapter also revises the whole concept of matka again, from a framework point of view which is more easier to understand.

Historical Background

At first, during the 60's people gambled on opening and closing rates of cotton transmitted from New York Cotton Exchange. Pretty boring and less dramatic. Then, Matka happened.

They used to put numbered chits in a big earthen pot (called 'matka' in hindi) and draw from it; hence the name "Matka".

Concept of Pana

The Process

Three Playing cards were drawn from the pot(matka) and were put on the table.

Then, they arranged it in Ascending Order; smallest of the three cards first to largest at last.

They called it "PANA"

Key Rules

  • In Matka, 0 is considered more than 9

  • A Pana is "Always" in Ascending Order

  • Any 3 digit number when arranged in ascending order, produced only 220 unique numbers

120

Single Pana (SP)

3 unique numbers

Example: 123

90

Double Pana (DP)

Two consecutive repeating

Example: 558

10

Triple Pana (TP)

Three numbers same

Example: 888

Concept of Single (Ank)

The Process

They added the 3 cards. The resultant total by adding the 3 digits of the Pana, is called its SINGLE.

Rule A: Total ≤ 9

If total is 0-9, the total is considered as "Single"

Ex. 134 (1+3+4) = 8

Rule B: Total > 9

If total is 10-27, second digit is considered as "Single"

Ex. 689 (6+8+9) = 23 → 3

Key Facts

  • There are 10 Singles: 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9

  • 22 Panas are permanently allotted to each Single

  • Every Pana sums to a Single

Concept of Open and Close

OPEN

The First draw. They'd draw 3 Cards, arrange them in Ascending Order, then sum the cards to produce the Open Single.

CLOSE

The Second draw (after 1 hour break). They'd draw 3 Cards, arrange them in Ascending Order, then sum the cards to produce the Close Single.

Full Result

Always, a matka result, be it open result or close result, is a "Pana and its resulting Single". The Open Result and Close Result were arranged on the table to form the "Full Result".

Game Variations

Arranging the Open and Close in a standard format gave rise to more ideas.

JODI

Open Single + Close Single

2 Digit variation

SANGAM

Open Pana + Close Pana

6 Digit variation

HALF SANGAM A

Open Pana + Close Single

Hybrid variation

HALF SANGAM B

Open Single + Close Pana

Hybrid variation

The Matka Framework

10

SINGLES

0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9

100

JODIS

10 Open × 10 Close

220

PANAS

120 SP + 90 DP + 10 TP

4400

HALF SANGAMS

220×10 + 10×220

48400

SANGAMS

220 × 220

22

PANAS PER SINGLE

12 SP + 9 DP + 1 TP

Matka Rate Chart

They gave different variations of the game, different rates. One would get paid according to the rate if what played matches with the drawn result.

SINGLES

1:9

Get 9 rupees for every 1 rupee played

JODI

1:90

Get 90 rupees for every 1 rupee played

SINGLE PANA

1:140

Get 140 rupees for every 1 rupee played

DOUBLE PANA

1:280

Get 280 rupees for every 1 rupee played

TRIPLE PANA

1:600

Get 600 rupees for every 1 rupee played

HALF SANGAM

1:1400

Get 1400 rupees for every 1 rupee played

SANGAM

1:15000

Get 15000 rupees for every 1 rupee played