Here's exactly how the Jupiter World Cup game works, and how you could share a prize pool of either $25,000 or $100,000.
Once you see the math it stops feeling like luck and starts feeling like a puzzle.
Rules:
- You pick five World Cup matches and predict how each one resolves. That's the whole game: a slip of five picks.
- You can only choose markets the app prices at 70% or lower, so you can never just line up five obvious favorites and coast.
- Quick way to read it: the odds you see (like 1.69x) convert to a percentage by dividing 1 by that number. So 1 ÷ 1.69 is about 59%. The 70% cutoff works out to roughly 1.43x, meaning anything priced 1.43x or higher is allowed, and anything below that is filtered out.
- The part that decides everything: it's all or nothing. Four right out of five doesn't pay you four fifths of anything. It pays zero. Every pick has to resolve correctly, so the fifth match matters as much as the first.
- And if you go five for five, you don't take the whole pool yourself. Everyone who goes five for five splits it evenly, so your share depends on how many others nailed it too.
Difference between $25,000 and $100,000:
- The $25,000 pool is free. Your first entry costs nothing beyond a 0.0005 SOL anti spam transfer, a fraction of a cent to keep bots out. One free slip = one free entry.
- The $100,000 pool is paid. Each entry is $10 dollars, with unlimited entries, so you can build many different five pick slips and give yourself more paths to a perfect score. The link between them: every $10 dollar entry also drops a free bonus entry into the $25,000 pool, so paid players are in both games at once.
Not financial advice, and you enter at your own risk.