- According to reports, Luke Littler has registered for a tour of the United Kingdom with 13 game nights
- The first has already been exhausted, with tickets for what they go from £ 50- £ 250
According to the reports, Luke Littler has registered for a lucrative visit for the United Kingdom that could be worth up to £ 130,000.
The nuclear has made a canvas on 13 exhibition nights throughout the country to capitalize on its popularity after winning the Darts World Championship.
He turned 18 last month and has been allowed to register for events away from the PDC tour, with every night when he reached up to £ 10,000 for the main stars.
Littler will play in front of the crowds, and not in the television cameras, in Blackpool, Skegness, Derby, Northampton, Warrington (its hometown), Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Portsmouth, according to Sun.
The world No 2 can cut money with tickets, which can be whipped for £ 300 for pop and merchandise.
These £ 300 platinum tickets often imply the opportunity to meet the player, have a crack in a nine dice challenge, sit on a table on the stage and sign a shirt.

According to reports, Luke Littler is scheduled for a lucrative tour of the United Kingdom for a value of up to £ 130,000

The 18 -year -old star is looking to charge but must balance the tour with the premier league commitments

It is said that he has aligned 13 tour dates and could reach up to £ 300 per ticket
His first exhibition night will be in Kelso, Scotland, on April 25, one night that is already exhausted.
The standard tickets for that were for £ 50, with VIP and Platinum offers reaching £ 100 and £ 250.
Next to Littler, Willie Borland, John Henderson and Robert Thornton will be there.
Littler is a busy man after seeing his fame Sky Rocket in the World Championship in 2023-24.
For the second consecutive year, it is part of the Darts Premier League line, a commitment that involves 17 nights of darts between February and May, including the grand final in the play-offs in the O2 Arena.
At least his exhibition nights will help him save a luxury that takes into account: a Mercedes.
He told Mail Sport in January: 'I just need to approve my test. But it's about finding time with my Dart tournaments worldwide. I've never been behind the wheel. I have not done it, but I have always wanted to drive.
'There are shock courses in Blackpool and Liverpool where you do 40 hours for five days. I will do them anywhere if I can, when I am not busy, which I am generally '.