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The Scratch and Wish Ticket

Five chances to win on one ticket!

The Scratch and Wish Ticket was bought in 1990 in a 7-11 by a college student with a lotto addiction. The ticket looks like any other instant win lotto game except that there are no rules on the back. The game’s name “Scratch and Wish” are written across the top in big block letters and beneath “Sixth Bonus Box!” is written in an easy to read cursive font. There are five silver scratch boxes across the ticket and a sixth at the bottom that is smaller than the rest. The two top boxes are scratched. The first reads “A – A – A – A – P” and the second “Cindy Lowell”.

Word of the ticket, and the ticket itself, makes the rounds through the occult underground. The popular theory is that one must merely wish for something and scratch and what the ticket gives you is written under the foil. It is also assumed that the wishes have a number of unpleasant consequences – after all the first owner didn’t finish out the ticket.

Who ever owns the ticket can add a positive shift to rolls for events where they truly wish for an outcome. The total amount that can be added to rolls in a day is 30%. The holder of the ticket suffers a critical failure on all matched failures and a matched failure on all regular failures.

Scratching the next box shows a specific object that fulfills a wish of the character at the time of the scratching. It also drops the total available shift per day by 10%.

One thought on “The Scratch and Wish Ticket

  1. Menzoa says:

    Maybe it’s not exactly the idea above, but there’s something perfectly appropriate about the idea of winning a person in the lottery. Maybe it’s just a non-entity, or maybe it’s a normal person. Or maybe being won as a lottery prize is how non-entities become real people.

    Reply

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