With choices from $2 to $30 and games to keep you busy for hours, there are so many Cashword options from the Ohio Lottery. But with so many choices, how do you decide which ones to play first? To help you solve this, we decided to play them all and break them down for you one by one.
Here’s everything you need to know …
CASH EXPLOSION CASHWORD
The low-cost, high-fun option with a chance to make you TV-famous.
Price: $2
Top prize: $20,000
Number of games on ticket: 1 + bonus box
Game on the back: No
Overall odds: 1 in 4.22
How it plays
There’s plenty of game in this $2 ticket. With 18 letters for you to reveal and find and a three-word minimum to win … play time actually takes time, which is great. But wait, there’s more. Scratch the bonus box to see if you’ve won instantly or if you’re eligible to be a contestant on “Cash Explosion”!
Trade-offs
Lower top prize than other Cashwords but high entertainment for a $2 Scratch-Off. Plus, you get a chance to be on TV and potentially win even more.
What makes it fun
Beyond the joys of the Cashword game itself, every ticket gives you a chance to be a contestant on “Cash Explosion.” And what’s more fun than that?
SPECIAL EDITION CASHWORD
The full Cashword experience with two full puzzles to keep you entertained.
Price: $5
Top prize: $300,000
Number of games on ticket: 2 puzzles + bonus word
Game on the back: No
Overall odds: 1 in 4.11
How it plays
Scratch 20 letters and use them across two full Cashword puzzles. Just like the $2 ticket, find three or more words in either puzzle to win. This time, your bonus is tied to your 20 letters as well, which ties the whole ticket together nicely. Find the entire bonus word to win.
Trade-offs
The odds don’t change much between the $2 and the $5, but you get more games to play and higher prizes to win.
What makes it fun
For those who love Cashword, you get double the fun. And the bonus word just feels like a cherry on top.
$500,000 CASHWORD
Better odds meets expanded gameplay with even bigger prize possibilities.
Price: $10
Top prize: $500,000
Number of games on ticket: 2 puzzles
Game on the back: No
Overall odds: 1 in 3.69
How it plays
Just like the $5, reveal 20 letters and play across two puzzles. The change? The number of words to win has gone up (four or more) but so has the prizing.
Trade-offs
With no bonus or extra games, this ticket is pure Cashword without a lot of fluff. What you get in exchange is better odds and bigger prizes.
What makes it fun
Beyond the continued joys of playing Cashword, this game’s rewards come in the form of lower odds, bigger prizes, and no-nonsense gameplay.
$1,000,000 CASHWORD
The best odds in the Cashword family with engaging, layered gameplay.
Price: $20
Top prize: $1,000,000 ($40K/yr for 25 yrs)
Number of games on ticket: 3 puzzles + 4 bonus words
Game on the back: No
Overall odds: 1 in 3.18
How it plays
The 20 letters are back, but this time you play across three puzzles and four bonus words. The first two puzzles share prizing and the third has its own separate prize. Combine that with bonus words that could pay out instantly, and you have a lot of ways to win.
Trade-offs
It’s not the cheapest ticket in the group, but you get a lot of gameplay out of one ticket and – at 1 in 3.18 – the strongest overall odds of winning.
What makes it fun
It feels like you’re constantly discovering new ways to win. With three puzzles plus the bonus words, there’s a lot of gaming packed into this $20 Scratch-Off.
$2,000,000 CASHWORD
The ultimate Cashword experience: big prizes, high gameplay variety, plus bonus games on the back.
Price: $30
Top prize: $2,000,000 ($80K/yr for 25 years)
Number of games on ticket: 2 puzzles + 4 bonus words + quick win bonus + full bonus puzzle on back
Game on the back: Yes
Overall odds: 1 in 3.37
How it plays
The 20 letters remain consistent, as do the two puzzles, but this is where the similarities end. On top of the four bonus words you got in the $20, a quick win bonus has been added along with a special extra game on the back. This game even has its own letter set, so it’s almost like getting two tickets in one.
Trade-offs
You get what you pay for and this game has more of everything. More prizes, more instant win opportunities, and the biggest top prize.
What makes it fun
Beyond the sky-high prizing opportunities and better odds than the lower-tiered games, this game is action-packed. With the bonus words, quick wins and bonus puzzle on the back, this game is sure to keep anyone entertained for quite some time. If you love Cashword, this is as Cashword as it gets.
OVERALL IMPRESSIONS
No matter how you slice it, Ohio Lottery’s Cashword Scratch-Offs are a lot of fun to play and a great way to pass the time. Plus, with so many games to choose from, there’s no wrong way. The millions in prizes don’t hurt either. Hope this helps! And remember to keep it fun and play responsibly.
I made a nmap type tool that automatically finds vulnerabilitys like a vulnerability scanner its called dootseal
I’m planning a 12-episode learning series focused entirely on Nmap from the terminal, aimed at beginners who get stuck memorising flags instead of understanding what question they’re trying to answer.
The structure I’m working with is roughly:
starting with host discovery and scan intent
moving through scan types and timing
script usage and version detection
output interpretation and common pitfalls
ending with how to think about Nmap results in a larger workflow (without turning it into a checklist)
The goal isn’t “run every flag” or speed-running scans, but helping people understand:
when a specific scan actually makes sense
how to read results without over-trusting them
why defaults behave the way they do
where beginners most often misinterpret output
All examples would be run against machines I own or controlled lab environments. No flags, no walkthroughs, no live targets.
Before I lock the outline, I’d really appreciate input from people who use Nmap regularly:
What do beginners misunderstand most about Nmap?
Which flags or scan types are usually explained badly or out of context?
Are there habits you wish tutorials would stop teaching?
Is there anything you think must be covered in a serious beginner-to-intermediate series?
I’m trying to avoid repeating the same shallow explanations that already exist, so direct criticism is genuinely helpful.
Thanks.