How to Check 4D Results Online — Malaysia, Singapore & Cambodia

A practical guide to checking today's 4D draw and historical results across all ten major operators — Magnum, Da Ma Cai, Sports Toto, Singapore Pools, Grand Dragon, Perdana, Sabah 88, STC Sandakan, Special Cash Sweep, and Lucky Hari Hari.

4dcheck Editorial · 2026-05-18 · Guides · 6 min read

If you buy 4D tickets across more than one operator, looking up the day's results can quickly become a chore. Magnum, Da Ma Cai, and Sports Toto each have their own results page. The East Malaysian operators (Sabah 88, STC Sandakan, Special Cash Sweep) sit on separate licensed feeds. Singapore Pools has its own portal and a different draw cadence. Cambodia's daily operators (Grand Dragon, Perdana, Lucky Hari Hari) post results on their own schedules. This guide covers what those results actually contain, when each operator draws, and a practical workflow for checking a 4-digit number across every operator in under a minute.

What 4D actually is

4D — short for 4-digit — is a numbers-forecast game in which players pick a 4-digit combination from 0000 to 9999 and bet that it matches a winning number drawn by the operator. The basic mechanic is identical across Malaysia, Singapore, and Cambodia: an operator runs a draw at a published time, publishes the winning numbers, and pays out fixed prizes based on which positions the player's number matches. The interesting variation between operators is not in the core mechanic but in the prize structure, the schedule, and the side games attached to the main 4D pool.

What a 4D result page contains

Almost every operator we track uses the same twenty-three-position prize structure per draw: one 1st prize, one 2nd prize, one 3rd prize, ten Special prize numbers, and ten Consolation prize numbers. That gives twenty-three distinct 4-digit combinations per draw — so on a single Wednesday across Magnum, Da Ma Cai, and Sports Toto you'll see 69 winning combinations published in total. Add Singapore Pools on a Wednesday and you're at 92. On a busy draw day across all 10 operators, the count can exceed 150 winning numbers.

The labelling varies slightly. Da Ma Cai's official material calls the secondary tier "Starter Prize" rather than "Special". On 4dcheck we remap that label so the layout matches everywhere; the mechanics and payouts are unchanged. Perdana's feed prefixes some prize positions with letter codes like (A), (B), or (C) — these are row markers, not part of the winning number. Our ingest strips them so you see the raw 4 digits.

When each operator draws

Draw cadence matters because it determines when you should check. The Malaysian peninsular operators — Magnum, Da Ma Cai, and Sports Toto — draw on Wednesday, Saturday, and Sunday, with results typically published by 19:30 MYT. The East Malaysian operators (Sabah 88, STC Sandakan, Special Cash Sweep) run the same three-day-a-week schedule with results posted at similar times.

Singapore Pools adds Monday to the rotation, so it draws four times a week: Monday, Wednesday, Saturday, and Sunday. Results are typically posted by 18:45 SGT. The Cambodian operators are different: Grand Dragon Lotto and Perdana each run a single daily draw around 19:00 ICT, while Lucky Hari Hari runs two daily draws — an afternoon session around 15:30 and an evening session around 19:30. That means on a typical Wednesday in the calendar, you can see a peak of 6 distinct operators publishing results within the same evening window, plus the daily Cambodian operators.

Why use an aggregator at all

There are three good reasons to use an aggregator like 4dcheck rather than visiting ten operator sites in sequence. First, speed: a single page can show you whether a number won at any operator on any date in our window. Second, consistency: each operator's site formats its results differently, sometimes with PDFs, sometimes with image-only displays, sometimes with sticky banners and other clutter. An aggregator normalises the display. Third, history: most official sites carry only a short rolling archive — typically the last few months or the last year. Aggregators that store every result they ingest can let you walk back further than the operator's own site exposes.

4dcheck is independent. We don't sell tickets, we don't take bets, and we don't operate any gambling platform. For any prize claim or rules question, the official operator is the source of truth.

A practical checking workflow

Here's a workflow that takes most users about thirty seconds end-to-end.

  • Open the home page. The grid of operator logos at the top shows today's most recent draw for each operator. If you only need a quick check of today's numbers, you're done.
  • If you want a specific past date, open `/results/<date>` directly — for example `/results/2026-05-13`. The same panel layout shows every operator that drew that day.
  • If you have a specific number in mind, open /check and type your 4 digits. You'll land on `/history/<number>` which lists every recorded win of that number across every operator we track.
  • If you usually bet at one specific operator, bookmark its detail page — for example /operators/magnum — which shows the latest result up top, a 30-draw archive below, and an FAQ specific to that operator.
  • If you're curious about which numbers come up most often, /tools/hot-cold ranks numbers by frequency. Remember: frequency is a backward-looking statistic, not a prediction.

Mobile vs desktop checking

Most casual users on 4dcheck come from mobile. The site is designed mobile-first: the operator grid drops to two columns on a phone screen, the result panel scales the prize numbers responsively, and the bottom navigation bar keeps the four core sections (home, operators, check, tools) one tap away even when you scroll. Desktop users get the same layout with a wider grid and a sidebar of related links. Each page has a canonical URL and standard Open Graph metadata, so if you share a result link to chat — WhatsApp, Telegram, Slack — the preview card will render correctly with the relevant date or operator.

What about "hot" and "cold" numbers?

It's tempting to look at frequency data and conclude that a "hot" number is somehow primed to keep winning, or that a "cold" number is "due" to win soon. Both of these are forms of the gambler's fallacy — the mistaken belief that past random events change the probability of future ones. Each 4D draw is mechanically independent. A combination that just won has exactly the same 1-in-10,000 chance of winning the next draw at the same operator. Use /tools/hot-cold for curiosity, not prediction. We explore this in more detail in our companion article on hot and cold number statistics.

When the result you see seems wrong

Two failure modes show up occasionally. First, during a live draw window — typically 19:00 to 19:45 MYT for Malaysian operators — you may briefly see an incomplete result (e.g. only the top 3 prizes, with Special and Consolation tiers showing blanks). This is because our scheduler picks up the result as soon as it's published, and the operator may publish the 1st/2nd/3rd block before the full 23-position list. Refresh once or twice and the full block fills in. We also re-fetch up to four times per draw, so a stale row usually completes within an hour.

Second, very occasionally an operator changes the format of its public feed and our scraper temporarily lags. We have automated alerts for missing rows and usually patch within hours. If you spot a result that looks broken, the official operator site is the canonical source — please cross-check there before claiming any prize.

Responsible play

4D is gambling. The expected value of every bet is negative — that's how operators make money. If your play is for entertainment, set a fixed budget, stick to it, and treat any winnings as bonus rather than expected income. If you're concerned about the role gambling plays in your life, please see our responsible gambling page and consider reaching out to a local support service. The role of 4dcheck is to make result checking convenient, not to encourage betting.

Further reading

Once you're comfortable checking results, the next things to understand are the prize tiers themselves, the difference between Big and Small play, and how iBox / Permutation bets work. We cover each of those in dedicated articles linked below.

Related reading