
JSHO Live refreshed the 75-ball pattern inventory for Q2. Filipino cross stays 40×, diamond pays 35×, and "Pinoy square" was retired for under-triggering in Q4.
At 19:30 PHT inside the JSHO 75-ball Jackpot Room, the Q2 pattern inventory took effect on Feb 1 with the Filipino cross holding its 40× card-price multiplier. The desk had been weighing a push to 50× through the December planning cycle, but the December trigger data — 8.4% of all cards across the ₱5 room — confirmed the existing rate already produces healthy cadence without straining the room's payout pool. The Diamond pattern stays at 35× with a 6.1% observed trigger rate, and the Pinoy Square exits the rotation after a sustained under-trigger pattern through Q4. This is the curator's full pattern walk-through for the Q2 refresh.
The 75-ball Jackpot Room sits as JSHO's mid-tier pattern hall, deliberately positioned between the entry-level ₱1 Jili room (where the pattern set narrows to corners-and-line only) and the 20:00 90-ball Mega Hall (where the math simplifies to single-line, two-line and full-house only). The Jackpot Room's value proposition is pattern variety — five active patterns covering five distinct payout bands and trigger frequencies — with a card price (₱5) low enough that pattern experimentation does not strain a typical ₱200 evening bankroll.
The Q2 refresh is a quarterly review the desk runs to recalibrate pattern multipliers against observed trigger rates and payout-pool health. Patterns that under-trigger across a quarter are paused, those that trigger inside the targeted band are retained at current multipliers, and those that trigger above the band become candidates for multiplier reductions in the following quarter. The Filipino cross at 8.4% sits inside its 7-10% target band, which is why the 50× multiplier discussion was deferred.
| Pattern | Multiplier | Q4 Observed Trigger | Card Cost (₱) | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Filipino Cross | 40× card price | 8.4% | ₱5 | Retained Q2 |
| Diamond | 35× card price | 6.1% | ₱5 | Retained Q2 |
| Four Corners | 25× card price | 11.2% | ₱5 | Retained Q2 |
| Line (any) | 15× card price | 18.0% | ₱5 | Retained Q2 |
| Full Card | 100× card price | 2.8% | ₱5 | Retained Q2 (jackpot tier) |
| Pinoy Square | — | 2.1% | — | Retired (under-trigger) |
The Filipino cross — a five-square pattern formed by the centre column and centre row of the 5×5 grid — is structurally one of the easier 75-ball patterns to complete because both the centre square is free and the pattern requires only nine called numbers (four down each arm and the centre). The 8.4% Q4 trigger rate is actually toward the upper end of the pattern's expected-frequency band, which is the structural reason the desk paused on the multiplier increase.
A 50× multiplier would shift the per-card expected return from the pattern from ₱16.80 (₱5 × 40 × 8.4%) to ₱21.00 (₱5 × 50 × 8.4%) — a ₱4.20 lift per card that would compound across the room's typical 800-card-per-evening throughput into a ₱3,360 nightly payout-pool drain. The current 40× rate keeps the pattern's return contribution sustainable while preserving room throughput.
The Diamond pattern requires a player to fill the four edge midpoints (B-3, I-3, G-3, O-3 if reading position-coded) plus the free centre — a five-square pattern that sits structurally similar to the Filipino cross in completion difficulty but with a meaningfully lower observed trigger rate (6.1% versus 8.4%). The differential reflects positional probability: edge-midpoint balls draw at a marginally slower distribution than centre-column balls across full-deck draws, which compounds across the 5-square requirement.
The 35× multiplier was set at room launch and remains correctly calibrated for the trigger rate. Players who favour the Diamond should know it pays approximately ₱10.68 per card in expected value (₱5 × 35 × 6.1%), versus ₱16.80 for the Filipino cross — a meaningful enough gap that pattern selection becomes a strategic decision rather than aesthetic preference.
The Pinoy Square — a 3×3 block in the upper-left, upper-right, lower-left or lower-right quadrant — required nine specific positional hits, which made completion structurally rare even with optimal call distribution. The Q4 observed trigger rate of 2.1% sat below the 3.0% floor the desk's jackpot math requires for a pattern to earn its rotation slot, and the under-trigger margin had been consistent across Q3 and Q4 rather than a one-quarter outlier.
The retirement is provisional rather than permanent. If player feedback through the Q2 cycle suggests the pattern's absence is materially affecting room appeal — measured through the post-session prompt — the desk will re-evaluate for a Q3 reintroduction, potentially at a higher multiplier (60-70× rather than the original 50×) to align expected return with the lower trigger rate.
| Dimension | 75-Ball Jackpot Room | 20:00 90-Ball Mega Hall |
|---|---|---|
| Active patterns | 5 retained Q2 | 3 (line, two-line, full house) |
| Card price | ₱5 | ₱5 |
| Median full-house call number | 54 | 69 |
| Median session duration | 8 min 12 sec | 11 min 45 sec |
| Mobile card readability | 5×5 grid, thumb-friendly | 9×3 strip, narrower columns |
| Best for | Pattern variety, shorter rounds | Higher-tier full-house multipliers, social pacing |
The two halls pair well across an evening session. A typical Royal Hall regular runs 75-ball cards through the 19:00 to 19:55 window, then rotates to the Mega Hall for the 20:00 90-ball block, then back to 75-ball for the 21:00 onwards rotation. The pattern variety in the 75-ball room rewards mobile play, which is why it stays the busier of the two halls between 19:00 and 22:00.
The ₱5 card-entry tier holds across both the 75-ball Jackpot Room and the 20:00 90-ball Mega Hall, which makes cross-hall rotation friction-free for players who want to sample both formats without recalibrating bankroll math each switch. The Jili Bingo ₱1 room remains the busiest entry-level session inside JSHO by raw card volume — its narrower pattern set (corners and line only) is the trade-off for the ₱1 price tier, but the lower entry threshold genuinely supports pattern-experimentation traffic that flows upward into the ₱5 rooms over time.
Pros
Cons
| Question | Curator's Answer |
|---|---|
| Which pattern offers the highest expected return per card? | The Filipino cross at ₱16.80 expected return per ₱5 card, ahead of the Diamond's ₱10.68. |
| Should I prioritise patterns over the full card? | Patterns deliver more frequent positive outcomes; the full card delivers larger but rarer hits. Most regulars play both for portfolio balance. |
| Will the Pinoy Square ever return? | Provisional re-evaluation in Q3 if player-feedback prompts indicate material room-appeal impact. |
| Why is the 75-ball room better on mobile than 90-ball? | 5×5 grid renders cleanly on portrait handsets; 9×3 strips need landscape orientation for comfortable thumb tap. |
| Is auto-mark active for all patterns? | Yes, including the Filipino cross and Diamond. Players can disable manually for traditional play feel. |
The Royal Hall desk's Q2 editorial pick is the Filipino cross at the 19:30 PHT card-entry window. The 40× multiplier holding alongside the 8.4% observed trigger rate produces the best risk-adjusted pattern return in the JSHO inventory, and the 19:30 to 20:00 half-hour catches the Royal Hall's late-arriving regulars before the 90-ball Mega Hall rotation pulls attention away.
For new entrants to the room, the recommended progression is: three ₱5 cards at the 19:30 window targeting the Filipino cross plus any line, then rotate one card to the Diamond and one to the Four Corners through the 19:45 to 19:55 closing block. That portfolio gives the player exposure to four of the five active patterns inside a single session at a ₱25 commitment, with full-card upside as a bonus across all five cards.
Enter the JSHO 75-ball Jackpot Room and sample the Q2 pattern set — enter the JSHO Royal Hall here. Internal navigation: 21:00 Lucky Lucky crossover walkthrough · Super Ace bingo-break companion review · Jili Mines hall-break minigame.
Compliance footer · Only · Play within your means · GameCare PH 1800-1888-9999 · Pattern data sourced from JSHO room-management desk Q4 2025 cumulative report. Bingo regulatory frame per PAGCOR Gaming Site Regulatory Manual for Bingo Games v3.0.
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