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Bingo
Bingo is a game of chance for two or more players. Each player
is given a card marked with a grid containing a unique combination
of numbers and, in some countries, blank spaces. The winning pattern
to be formed on the card is announced. On each turn, a non-player
known as the caller randomly selects a numbered ball from a container
and announces the number to all the players. The ball is then set
aside so that it cannot be chosen again. Each player searches his
card for the called number, and if he finds it, marks it. The element
of skill in the game is the ability to search one's card for the
called number in the short time before the next number is called.
Canadian and American bingo cards are 5 X 5 grids of numbers only;
dual dab cards have two numbers in each square. Each space in the
grid contains a number, except for the centre square, which is considered
filled. The highest number used is 75. The columns are headed with
the letters of the word BINGO, and the letter is called with the
number – for example, B-10, I-25, N-40, G-55, O-70. Numbers
1 to 15 are assigned to the B column, 16 to 30 to the I column,
31 to 45 to the N column, 46 to 60 to the G column, and 61 to 75
to the O column.
Each card has a unique serial number to permit quick verification
by computer. All players calling bingo on the final ball split the
winnings. The nunbers are called slowly, and players often play
large numbers of cards (thirty is not an unusual number).
In the United Kingdom and Australia bingo cards have three rows
and nine columns. Five squares in each row contain numbers ranging
from 1 to 90 and the rest are blank. The numbers are usually called
quickly, so players rarely play more than one book (six cards).
A Bingo Book, (A set of Six cards) contains all the numbers from
1 to 90,
Fifteen numbers on each card, five numbers in each row.
The first column containing single numbers, the second ten, the
third twenties, and so on.
Number 90 is placed in the ninth column along with the eighties.
The caller continues to select and announce numbers until the first
player forms the agreed pattern(one line, two lines, full house)
on thier card and shouts out the name of the pattern or bingo. One
of the most common patterns, called house in the United Kingdom
and Australia and full card in Canada and the United States, simply
consists of marking all the numbers on the card. Other common Canadian
and American patterns are single line, two lines, centre cross,
L, Y, inner square (4 X 4), roving square (3 X 3), and roving kite
(a 3 X 3 diamond). On Canadian and American cards lines can be made
horizontally, vertically, or diagonally. Inner and roving squares
and kites must be completely filled; roving squares and kites may
be made anywhere on the card.
Canadian and American games often have multiple bingos –
for example, the players may first play for a single line, then
after that is called continue playing for a full card, then for
a consolation full card.
Because of the large numbers of cards played by individual players
in Canadian and American halls, most Canadian and American halls
have the players sit at tables, to which they often fasten their
cards with adhesive tape. To mark faster the players usually use
special markers called dabbers. At commercial halls, after calling
the number the caller then displays the next number on a television
monitor; bingo cannot be called until that number is called aloud,
however. The numbers already called and the patterns being played
are also displayed on electric signs.
There are traditional calls for the numbers. For example:
1 Kelly's Eye
5 Man Alive
7 Lucky for Some
8 One Fat Lady
9 Doctor's Orders
11 Legs
13 Unlucky for Some
16 Sweet Sixteen
21 Key of the Door
22 Two Little Ducks
23 Thee and Me
30 Dirty Gertie
37 More Than Eleven
45 Halfway There
51 Tweak of the Thumb
59 Brighton Line
64 Red Raw
66 Clickety-Click
71 Bang on the Drum
76 Trombones
79 One More Time
81 Stop and Run
86 Between the Sticks
88 Two Fat Ladies
90 Top of the Shop
all bingo
numbers
Although these numbers are amusing and each have thier own story,
most professional Bingo halls do not use them, as it would be in
breech of rules, for example if a caller was busy saying "two
little Ducks" and had a claim, the number 22 has not yet been
said, and is therefore not deemed "called" so in an instance
where a player may have missed there number, and a player is waiting
for 22 both players would have valid argument that their number
was "called".
Contents [showhide]
1 History
2 Modern takeoffs
3 Bingo in the gaming industry
4 Interesting Facts
5 External link
History
Bingo can be traced back to a game called Lotto, played in Italy
in 1530. The bingo name comes from a corruption of the name Beano,
the name of a form of bingo played in the United States in the 1920s.
Beano was so called because beans were used to cover the numbers.
Modern takeoffs
Two notable modern takeoffs on bingo have achieved some kind of
status in American culture:
Buzzword bingo (also called bullshit bingo)
Bovine bingo
Bingo in the gaming industry
Bingo is an expanding and highly profitable business in the UK.
The Rank group (owners of Hard Rock Cafe, Mecca Bingo and bluesquare.com)
is one of many global companies to have taken an interest in the
game, with other major chains including Mecca, Gala, Top Ten, and
Masons.
A typical bingo club in the UK can have between 4,000 and 60,000
customers a week, with prize money ranging from tens of pounds to
hundreds of thousands of pounds. A major Bingo event of 2004 was
the National Game company's Groundshaker prize draw promotion, played
by over 500 participating clubs throughout the country for a full
house (all numbers marked off). The prize is split into three: an
In-house prize, a regional prize (the country is split into about
12 regions) and the national prize which can range from £50,000
to £200,000 (usually highest on a Sunday night). This promotion
involved the biggest link-up of different Random Number Generator
systems to date.
Bingo is not only restricted to Mainstage Bingo, (bingo played
on bingo books) most Bingo halls contain Mechanised Bingo boards,
these boards are 4x4 with numbers ranging from 1-80 in colours (eg
Red 1-20, Blue 21-40, Yellow 41-60, White 61-80) these boards are
played for either money, or a prize. Games have multiple stakes,
and are played very quickly. Called by colour and number. (Eg. Red
number 2, Blue 30..etc) These games are played in patterns like
mainstage bingo, unlike mainstage any line can include diagonal
lines and downward lines, also four outer, and inner squares.
Interesting Facts
~An average British game of bingo takes between four and Four and
a half minutes.
~The average speed of a British bingo caller is 23 numbers per
minute.
~The average time to check a claim is 30 seconds.
~There is a "caller of the year competition." In which
callers compete for a two week holiday, and promote the game of
Bingo.
This article is licensed under
the GNU Free Documentation
License. It uses material from the Wikipedia
article "bingo".
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