An abundance has been talked in the papers just a while ago concerning the bingo industry struggling as a consequence of the cigarette ban in England. Things have grown so awful that in Scotland the Bingo industry has called for massive aid to help keep the industry from going bankrupt. However can the internet adaptation of this classic game offer a reprieve, or will it never compare to its bricks and mortar relative?
Bingo is an familiar game normally played by the "blue rinse" generation. In any case the game lately had experienced a recent resurgence in appeal with younger members of society opting to visit the bingo parlours in place of the discos on a Saturday night. This is all about to be destroyed with the introduction of the smoking ban throughout UK.
No more will enthusiasts be allowed to puff on cigarettes at the same time marking numbers. From the summer of 2007 all public locations will not be allowed to permit cigarettes in their buildings and this includes Bingo parlours, which are possibly the most favorite places where folks like to puff on cigarettes.
The results of the anti smoking law can already be looked at in Scotland where cigarettes are already not allowed in the bingo halls. Numbers have dropped and the business is literally struggling for its life. But where have all the players gone? Surely they have not given up on this classic game?
The answer is on the web. Players are now realizing that they can bet on bingo using their computer while enjoying a drink and fag and in the end, have a chance at big jackpots. This is a recent phenomenon and has timed itself bordering on perfect with the anti cigarette law.
Of course betting on on the internet is unlikely to replace the social part of going down to the bingo parlor, but for a group of men and women the rules have left a number of bingo enthusiasts with no alternative.