Jodi ka jodbhav is the study of how two-digit pairs (00 to 99) relate to one another on the record chart. Instead of chasing a single lucky number, players who follow this method look at the partner value of every jodi — the mirror pair, the reverse pair, and the cut pair — and track how often those companions appear together within the same week or the same market cycle. The idea is simple: numbers rarely travel alone, and a chart often repeats a familiar family of jodis before rotating to a new set.
When you build a jodbhav table, it helps to group each jodi with its natural relatives so the pattern becomes visible at a glance:
By logging which relatives followed a result in past panels, some players believe they can narrow a wide 100-number field down to a short, manageable watch-list. Remember, though, that a jodbhav table only organises history — it can never guarantee the next draw. Please treat this purely as chart study, bet only what you can comfortably afford, and keep in mind that matka is a game of chance meant for entertainment only.