So this is something I've always wondered about when it comes to PtR, and I'm hoping someone with more math smarts than me can help me make sense of it. I know this will probably sound like a stupid question, but I'm genuinely curious about this.
So in some games like Pick-a-Pair or Take Two, there can be more than one winning combination. That I get. PaP has an even number of products (I think), so all you'd have to do is have three pairs. Simple. Take Two could work the same way, set up your prizes so that more than just two can add up to the winning total, which you can do without having two that have the same price.
But I've seen in more than one recap how PtR can have more than one winning combination. Maybe I just haven't watched the game enough times, or maybe I'm just no good with math (more than likely the latter, numbers are NOT my friends). Having a single winning combination makes sense, since obviously the game wouldn't get past S&P if you couldn't win it.
But how is it possible to have more than one way to arrange the products? (I know you don't put the cheapest item in the mailbox, is that part of it?)