The Weekend We Quietly Became a 57-Game Oracle

By Tony Scott • March 30, 2026

Some weekends nudge the roadmap. This one grabbed the wheel, floored it, and yelled “hold my coffee.”

Over the past few days we expanded the Stepzero map, automated a chunk of the daily ops grind, deepened Oracle’s reach, and shipped a fully refreshed mobile experience. All of it pushes us toward the same mission: signals, not superstition—and now with even more data to back it up.

Two New States, Dozens of New Stories

Virginia and Connecticut are officially in. Their full draw histories are now searchable, their droughts are on the reports, and Oracle can answer questions about them. The total the Oracle can reason about is now 57 games across every jurisdiction we cover.

Every new state is more than a pin on a map. It’s:

  • A brand-new Pick 3 / Pick 4 ecosystem with decades of quirks and anomalies.
  • Fresh jackpot arcs and streaks that nobody else is stitching together.
  • Another place where players can finally ask, “What’s actually happening here?” and get a grounded, data-driven answer instead of numerology cosplay.

With these additions, Oracle now reasons across 57 games. That number isn’t a vanity metric—it’s the set of games Oracle can answer about in real time, and it keeps growing.

From founder-run ops to real infrastructure

Until this weekend, our daily work looked like every early-stage product — a lot of manual glue holding the pipeline together: fetch the latest draws, upsert them, run connectors, double-check everything, hope nothing silently broke. This weekend, that era ended.

The new automated pipeline now:

  • Fetches and upserts new lottery results automatically.
  • Runs the correct connectors for the correct games on schedule.
  • Feeds a dedicated ops worker that monitors the queue and keeps everything flowing.

In practice, this means fewer “Did I remember to run that job?” moments and more “What new questions can we ask now that the data is always fresh?”

It’s the kind of upgrade users don’t see but absolutely feel—faster answers, synced dashboards, and an Oracle that always has the latest universe of data at its fingertips.

California Opened the Door

California has historically been one of the trickier jurisdictions to work with. Recently, that changed: California granted us access to their official API.

Official API access doesn’t change what the game does — it just means the data we show you now comes from the state itself.

That single decision matters:

  • No more brittle scraping—just clean, stable, official data.
  • Fewer gaps, delays, or format surprises.
  • California becomes a first-class citizen in the Stepzero data graph, exactly where one of the nation’s biggest lotteries belongs.

When a major lottery chooses collaboration over obstruction, it’s a quiet vote of confidence in the seriousness of your approach.

The Inmates Took Over (The Mobile App)

While the backend leveled up, the “inmates” completely rebuilt the mobile version of Stepzero—and the result is legitimately great.

The new mobile experience delivers:

  • Faster, cleaner access to droughts, reports, and trends on a small screen.
  • Clearer context around what Oracle can see and explain for each game.
  • A visual and interaction language that finally matches the desktop app.

Now the same analytical backbone feels coherent whether you’re at a desk or standing in a convenience store wondering if your Pick 4 strategy is genius or delusion.

When the inmates run the asylum and the product gets better, you know you’re doing something right.

Where This All Points

Put together, this weekend’s work tells a simple story:

  • More states and games mean a wider horizon of questions Oracle can answer.
  • Automation and an ops worker mean those answers are grounded in fresh, reliable data.
  • Cooperative access from places like California means we’re building on rock, not sand.
  • A revamped mobile app means those signals show up where players actually live: on their phones.

Stepzero is becoming the place where you can ask the questions nobody else can answer—because nobody else has both the data and the discipline to do it right.

Signals, not superstition. Now 57 games deep, with a map that refuses to stop expanding.