Super Bowl Squares, Explained

There's no shortage of ways to gamble on Super Bowl LV, which pits the Kansas City Chiefs against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

 You can study the game's point spreads and any number of prop bets.

 If you're looking for another way to engage in some Super Bowl fun, many fans turn to Super Bowl squares.

The setup for Super Bowl squares is relatively simple.

A pool consists of 10 vertical columns and 10 horizontal rows, both numbered from zero to nine.

One Super Bowl team—in this year's case either the Chiefs or the Buccaneers—gets the columns and the other gets the rows.

Each of the 100 squares inside are then purchased individually with each square priced equally.

In most pools, the members of your respective Super Bowl party can then buy as many squares ,

as they'd like in each quarter. The more squares that are bought, the greater the payout for the winner.

Once every box of the pool has been sold, the numbers assigned to each row and column are selected at random.

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