Bingo: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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B-I-N-G-O is its name-o and it's one of the more continually popular board games in North America. Weekly gatherings for it are still found in many churches and community centers.
B-I-N-G-O is its name-o and it's one of the more continually popular board games in North America. (There's [[w:Bingo (British version)|a different version with more numbers]] played in the UK; that version is called "Kinzo" in Quebec.) Weekly gatherings for it are still found in many churches and community centers.


Overall, Bingo is a game of chance. Each Bingo player gets one or more cards, each with a 5×5 grid marked with various numbers. The center cell of each card is often designated "free" and may be covered first. While a "caller" draws numbers, the players mark off the numbers on their cards. The first person to accurately mark off a certain pattern of called numbers on his card (usually five in a row, horizontally, vertically or diagonally), and shout BINGO! is declared the winner.
Overall, '''Bingo''' is a game of chance. Each Bingo player gets one or more cards, each with a 5×5 grid marked with various numbers. The center cell of each card is often designated "free" and may be covered first. While a "caller" draws numbers, the players mark off the numbers on their cards. The first person to accurately mark off a certain pattern of called numbers on his card (usually five in a row, horizontally, vertically or diagonally), and shout BINGO! is declared the winner.


Stereotypically, it's known as a game that old people like to play. Because bingo is a game of chance with prizes offered, how gambling regulation would affect it tends to be a talking point for politicians looking toward the older demographic.
Stereotypically, it's known as a game that old people like to play. Because bingo is a game of chance with prizes offered, how gambling regulation would affect it tends to be a talking point for politicians looking toward the older demographic.
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Revision as of 19:28, 18 January 2020

B-I-N-G-O is its name-o and it's one of the more continually popular board games in North America. (There's a different version with more numbers played in the UK; that version is called "Kinzo" in Quebec.) Weekly gatherings for it are still found in many churches and community centers.

Overall, Bingo is a game of chance. Each Bingo player gets one or more cards, each with a 5×5 grid marked with various numbers. The center cell of each card is often designated "free" and may be covered first. While a "caller" draws numbers, the players mark off the numbers on their cards. The first person to accurately mark off a certain pattern of called numbers on his card (usually five in a row, horizontally, vertically or diagonally), and shout BINGO! is declared the winner.

Stereotypically, it's known as a game that old people like to play. Because bingo is a game of chance with prizes offered, how gambling regulation would affect it tends to be a talking point for politicians looking toward the older demographic.

Bingo is a common theme for state lottery tickets. Various attempts have also been made to turn it into a televised Game Show, as it has a natural "play at home" component, including 1953's Bingo at Home, as well as the more modern National Bingo Night and Bingo America.

A number of related games have popped up, including Lingo, a word game show that uses a bingo board mechanic, and Slingo, an online game that uses a slot machine mechanic to call the numbers.

Another common variation is "Buzzword Bingo", which was invented in 1993 and popularized in a Dilbert comic strip the next year. In this case, each square has a largely-meaningless "buzzword" (Paradigm, user-centric, proactive etc.), and players attending a meeting mark off which ones are used in its course.

This has given rise to its online variation of "argument bingo" where the board contains overused arguments or trolling statements, and the erstwhile message-board participant is to mark them off. Of course, the mere fact that you're able to shout BINGO! at a post doesn't act as proof against points raised in and of itself. But man it can be fun to play at home.

Tropes used in Bingo include:
Examples of Bingo include:

Anime and Manga

  • In the first season of Full Metal Panic!, the crew of the Tuatha de Dannan play bingo with the prize being a kiss from the (attractive female) captain... having some fun, just before Mood Whiplash hits the story.