For a Berkshire Hathaway employee to win the US$1m a year for the rest of his or her life, they will need to pick the correct winners of all 32 first-round games, plus the 16 games in the second round.
Thankfully that's as far as they will have to go. According to the NCAA website, the odds of predicting the entire tournament correctly (67 games) is as low as 1 in 9,223,372,036,854,775,808.
Buffett is also offering a US$100,000 prize to the employee whose bracket stays intact the longest.
Last year, a man from West Virginia claimed the US$100,000 prize after correctly predicting 31 of the first 32 games.
Buffett started the company bracket challenge in 2014, and so far no one has won the major prize.
The 87-year-old Nebraska native further sweetened the deal by telling CNBC last month, "if either Creighton or Nebraska ends up winning the tournament, we're going to double the prize."
Sadly Nebraska did not end up qualifying for the field of 68, however Creighton is a No. 8 seed and will face Kansas State in the first round.