DC 4 Results
For the DC 4 draw on Saturday midday, August 23, 2025, 4524 returned after a 4037-day gap in District of Columbia. The gap is large relative to 1 in 10,000 draws (~3,333 days), placing it deep in the tail.
Winning numbers for 3 draws on August 23, 2025 in District of Columbia.
Draw times: D, Evening, N.
Our take on the DC 4 results
August 23, 2025DC 4 report — Saturday midday, August 23, 2025: 4524 returns after 4,037 days
For the DC 4 draw on Saturday midday, August 23, 2025, 4524 returned after a 4037-day gap in District of Columbia. The gap is large relative to 1 in 10,000 draws (~3,333 days), placing it deep in the tail.
Overview
For the DC 4 draw on Saturday midday, August 23, 2025, 4524 returned after a 4037-day gap in District of Columbia. The gap is large relative to 1 in 10,000 draws (~3,333 days), placing it deep in the tail.
A Long-Awaited Return
The current window shows 4524 resurfacing after 4037 days out of the results with no exact prior date available here. The duration alone signals an extended absence.
A Subtle Pattern in the Digits
Another small signal came from overlap: 2 came back across the two results, 4524 and 0292. Single repeats are expected at steady rates. The value is in tracking repetition frequency over time.
Combo Profile
Beyond the drought, the digits show a clean structure: 3 distinct digits with a repeated digit, spanning 2 to 5 (moderate spread).
Why Droughts Matter
Long gaps are descriptive, not a cue - they show where spacing departs from typical cadence. They offer context for distribution stability over time.
Data Notes
The approach: this report records the recorded draws for Saturday midday, August 23, 2025 and benchmarks them against historical frequency baselines. This is documentation, not a forecast.
From Stepzero
Simply put: this reporting is designed to sustain continuity in the archive as a calm, evidence-first reference. The focus is long-horizon context.
Adding to the Long-Term Record
The return of 4524 expands the archive by one more data point. It is the accumulation of these entries, not a single draw, that defines the reliability of long-horizon analysis.