Bingo Info Game History
The Bingo Info claims that the game starts its history in the end of XVIth century and is derived from the game named Lotto d’Italia. Since then the game was governed by the state authorities and gave amazing incomes to the state treasury. The modern version of the Bingo game is much similar to the game the way it was before in 1530. The amazing Bingo Info is that it was not once thought as the gambling entertainment of a filth. This is so maybe cause of the fact that during a long time the entertainment generated huge sums of cash for charity purposes and it still is a regular practice.
The Bingo spread around the world after it became very well-liked in Italy. In France according to the Bingo Info the entertainment won the souls of the French elite and though the gambling game is different from the one we gamble today, it yet has a lot in common particularly in rules and logic. Instead of balls the chips were applied in the entertainment, and the cards were made without the use of a single technique. The patterns in the French lotto were only the horizontal stripes.
Later in 1929 according to the Bingo Info the game came to the US. The game was those days called the “Beano” as the covers for the called balls were lima or pinto beans. At that times the Bingo patterns of vertical / diagonal stripes were introduced taking us to the game as we all know it today. In Georgia American entrepreneur Edwin Lowe saw the entertainment with his partners and was the initiator of its great success all over the globe. During one of his games one of the women won and instead of screaming out “Beano” cause it was the name of the game, the lady screamed out “Bingo” and Lowe applied this newly made word to name the entertainment in the US. Cause the entertainment got more and more popularity and the demand for the Bingo Info grew, Edwin Lowe had got a hard job of making the haphazard cards and invited Carl Leffler, an elderly professor of mathematics, to make 6,000 Bingo game tickets. Alas, the mission turned out to be too hard and drove Carl Leffler mad.