Bingo night keeps a lot of small halls going — the VFWs, the churches, the lodges, the senior centers. It raises money, and it gets people out of the house and into a room together. We didn't want the cost of the equipment to be the thing that ends it.
A proper electronic bingo flashboard — the big lit-up B‑I‑N‑G‑O board you see in bingo halls — costs $1,500 to $4,000, plus special hardware and setup. For a volunteer-run hall passing a coffee can, that's simply not happening. So a lot of games limp along with a chalkboard, a handwritten sheet, or someone shouting numbers across the room.
Every one of these halls already had a TV on the wall. The board was the expensive part — not the screen. So we asked a simple question: why not put the whole flashboard right on the TV they already own, run from a laptop and an HDMI cable? No console, no wiring, no install visit.
We built exactly that. A giant called-number board, the last call, a built-in caller for halls without a ball machine, and an optional camera to show the real balls — all on the screen that was already there.
BingoBoardTV is made for the people who run the game — the volunteers, the auxiliary members, the activity directors — not for a corporate hall with a big budget. It's built to be simple enough for anyone to run: huge numbers, high-contrast display, big buttons, and calling as easy as typing a number and hitting Enter.
VFWs and Legion posts · churches and parish halls · Moose, Elks, and Eagles lodges · senior and retirement communities · schools and PTAs · charity fundraisers.
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