Go-Go Bingo Offers a New Way to Play Online
There are a few styles of bingo that get the most attention in the online bingo world. While 90-ball and 75-ball are the most popular, 30-ball speed bingo and 80-ball bingo also have their audiences. Go-Go Bingo is a new way to play that combines ideas from different styles of the game and presents them in an intuitive way that gives you full control over your experience.
How This Game is Structured
You'll play four cards at a time in this game, but each card is broken up into a 5x3 grid with five vertical columns and three horizontal rows. There are 60 numbers in this game, which would make it a style of 60-ball bingo, which is extremely uncommon. Players will get 30 of those numbers drawn per playing around, and you'll try to make one of 12 different patterns on the 15-spot grid to get wins.
Experience Customization
Something that really makes this bingo game stand out is how much you can customize your experience. It starts by allowing you to choose background colors and other elements that decorate the interface itself. From there, you'll choose from a variety of stakes for your play, and the available wins are scaled up and down depending on how much you want to play for. This helps to avoid situations in traditional bingo rooms where none of the available stakes really hit exactly what you want. If you hit a winning pattern in this game, then it'll let you know right away, and your prizes are paid out right away.
Innovative Methodology
On top of this, there are some extra features available as well. If you only have one number left at the end of a playing round, you can purchase an Extra Ball to try to make the winning pattern. On top of that, sometimes you can get an Extra Ball during the play as a free sort of bonus, and that's a pretty cool way to reward players. Overall, they have an innovative methodology here, and it's cool to see that the envelope is being pushed in the online bingo world.
Sources
Press Release, Play Go-Go Bingo on the Go! bettingpartners.com, April 30, 2017
By Jesse Eddleman