
Then you can suddenly call for a combination which you expect many to have and call all of them to get a prize. Eg: After giving away lot of prizes, the person to receive a prize will be looking forward to a goo prize.

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If all players have bought the full column, change it to – Anyone with number 1 on their topmost ticket – i usually start off with this one giving all the ppl 1 cent/1 rupee as a prize!

i have given below the list (in random order) of all bingo “events” for which i have given away prizes. Now that you have so many gifts, how are you going to give them away if there are only 4 prizes (3 rows + 1 full house)? This is where you have to do things differently. if you don’t get a budget, make a guess as to the amount of money you will collect and then pre-buy gifts for that amount. So, if you are organising a bingo, try to get a budget for it and then buy many small gifts and give them out apart from the cash prizes. If i do manage to get sponsors, then the big gifts come out. In the tambola events i organise, i do give out cash prizes, but also lot of other small gifts which can be souvenirs, fridge magnets, tshirts and pracically anything else which is not so expensive.

Traditionally Bingos (or is it Bingoes) have cash prizes for the first five, the three rows and a full house, the cash prizes coming from the sale of the tickets. I do it a bit differently and as far as i know, it has been well received. I have been conducting Bingo sessions in our outdoor events at work for few years now. But, more often than not, we cornered most of the prizes due to the heavy probability in our favour. Others didn’t complain, for we contributed to the big prize money in the pool. While other bought 1 or 2 tickets each, we used to go and buy 10 to 15 tickets each, virtually dictating the way the event was conducted. We used to be 5 guys (fresh from college s/w engineers) staying together. When i was working/staying in bangalore, our apartment used to organise Bingo once a month with the tickets priced at 2 rupees each. Another game very popular in India (and, as i found out, very popular in Cyprus too) is the game of Tambola. I remember from back in school/college that dumbcharades was one of the most popular games played within a group, of course next to Antakshari. One of the most popular pages on my site is the one about Dumb Charades.
