The screen flashes. You hold a Final Chance ticket and feel the game tilt under your palms. I remember the moment I knew I had to be ruthless with which cards I scratched.
I’ve spent hours tracking odds, prices, and the invisible caps that stop “luck” from snowballing. You don’t have to waste coins to learn the pattern; I’ll show you which tickets matter, which are theater, and how to cross each catalog without hemorrhaging cash.
Rows of real scratch-off tickets sit under fluorescent lights at every corner store. All scratch tickets in Scritchy Scratchy
The game organizes tickets into four catalogs. Buy every ticket in a single catalog to unlock its Final Chance. Scratch that, accept the in-game death, then move to the next catalog. Prestige bonuses speed your early runs, so prioritize cheap, fast tickets if you’re chasing momentum.
Catalog 1
| Ticket Name | Cost |
|---|---|
| Two Win | $10 (€9) |
| Mini Scratch | $100 (€92) |
| Apple Tree | $1,000 (€920) |
| Quick Cash | $10,000 (€9,200) |
| Lucky Cat | $300,000 (€276,000) |
| Final Chance | $50,000,000 (€46,000,000) |
Cheap tickets let you cycle prestige and test the cap on luck. If you’re streaming on Twitch or sharing clips to Reddit, the small wins keep viewers engaged while you build a bankroll.
Which scratch ticket has the best odds?
There’s no single best ticket across every run because the game caps the benefit of extra luck. Think of early cards as training wheels: they teach mechanics and buy you prestiges; the higher-cost tickets are where the real payouts live, but they require the bankroll you’ll only get by grinding the lower tiers.
Catalog 2
| Ticket Name | Cost |
|---|---|
| Sand Dollars | $20,000,000 (€18,400,000) |
| Scratch My Back | $500,000,000 (€460,000,000) |
| Snake Eyes | $10,000,000,000 (€9,200,000,000) |
| The Bomb | $200,000,000,000 (€184,000,000,000) |
| Final Chance | $5,000,000,000,000 (€4,600,000,000,000) |
Catalog two shifts the stakes into millions and billions. Communicate your progression on Discord channels and scan Steam community threads to learn which ticket streaks other players have found repeatable.
How do Final Chance tickets work?
Final Chance becomes available only after you’ve purchased every other ticket in the catalog. Scratch it to trigger the catalog’s end—accept the reset and reap the benefits. If you’re trying to maximize speedruns or leaderboard position, time your prestiges so you hit the Final Chance with the highest viable luck that still matters.
Catalog 3
| Ticket Name | Cost |
|---|---|
| Bank Break | $200T (€184,000,000,000,000) |
| Xmas Countdown | $10Qa (€9,200,000,000,000,000) |
| Thrift Store | $500Qa (€460,000,000,000,000,000) |
| Berry Picking | $20Qi (€18,400,000,000,000,000,000) |
| Final Chance | $200Qi (€184,000,000,000,000,000,000) |
At this scale, numbers feel abstract, but the mechanic is the same: buy every non-Final ticket, then take the Final Chance. Community tools—like shared spreadsheets on Google Sheets or parsing scripts on GitHub—help you track whether you’ve hit the luck cap for each ticket.
Catalog 4
| Ticket Name | Cost |
|---|---|
| Trick Or Treat | $60.0Sx (€55 Sx) |
| Slot Machine | $5.00Sp (€5 Sp) |
| To the Moon | $800Sp (€736 Sp) |
| Booster Pack | $30.0Oc (€28 Oc) |
| Final Chance | $1.0No (€1 No) |
This catalog reads like a trophy room. Your run choices here are often dictated by prestige multipliers and whether you’re chasing a single massive payout or steady growth for repeated prestige turns.
There are two practical ways I coach players: farm cheap tickets fast to stack prestige if you want repeated speed, or save up and leap for a mid-tier ticket that gives a surge strong enough to buy the next catalog’s essentials. Both approaches work depending on whether you’re streaming, pushing leaderboards, or just hoarding coins for fun—your audience and goals will tell you which to pick.
Think of your ticket queue as a short ladder of coins, each rung either fragile or firm depending on your luck cap. Which ticket will you scratch first to test the ladder?