There are plenty of ways to gamble on Super Bowl LIV. You can wager on the point spread, the MVP award or countless prop bets. Super Bowl boxes are another way to make the game more interesting in your office or at a party.

It doesn’t take any skill or knowledge of the NFL to win a football squares pool. An expert of the Kansas Chiefs or San Francisco 49ers has the same chance as someone that will make Super Bowl LIV the only NFL game they watch in 2020.

The rules of a Super Bowl squares pool are very simple.

Click here for a printable document that can be used. The 49ers are along the x-axis and the Chiefs along the y-axis, but if you’re making your own squares chart it doesn’t matter which team is on which axis.

There are 10 boxes running horizontally and vertically that aren’t white. That’s where the numbers 0-9 are placed in random order.

Each player gets a box (or boxes, depending on how many they buy) drawn at random. A different prize is handed out, based on the final score of each quarter.

For example, if San Francisco leads 10-7 at the end of the first quarter, then the player owning the 49ers’ 0-box and the corresponding Chiefs’ 7-box will win the first round. If Kansas City leads 17-13 at halftime, whoever owns the Chiefs’ 7-box and the 49ers’ 3-box wins that round.

This is done for every quarter, with the biggest prize awarded for the box that corresponds to the final score of the game.

Some numbers are much more desirable than others. In the 53 Super Bowls, 0,0 has been the most popular combination at the end of the first quarter. The 0,7, 0,3 and 3,7 boxes have produced the most halftime winners. The 4,7 box has won the most at the end of the game.

Combinations like 5,5, 6,5 and 1,1 have never produced a winning box in any Super Bowl quarter.

Both the Chiefs (pictured) and San Francisco 49ers teams were presented before thousands of journalists and fans in the now circus-like "opening night" event that formally kicks off Super Bowl week
Both the Chiefs (pictured) and San Francisco 49ers teams were presented before thousands of journalists and fans in the now circus-like "opening night" event that formally kicks off Super Bowl week GETTY / Rob Carr