4 hours ago · Culture · hide · 0 comments

Image by DesignUni on Magnific Few games have travelled as far, or changed as many times, as bingo. It has been a Renaissance-era state lottery, a French parlour game for the aristocracy, a German teaching tool for schoolchildren, and a beloved fixture of seaside halls and community centres. Today it lives happily on screens around the world. The story of how a simple game of matching numbers spread across five centuries and several continents is one of the more delightful curiosities in the history of play.It Began in Renaissance ItalyThe earliest ancestor of bingo can be traced to Italy in the 1530s, shortly after the unification of the country's various states. A national lottery called Il Gioco del Lotto d'Italia was established, and remarkably, a version of it still runs in Italy to this day. Players chose numbers in the hope of matching those drawn, and the game became a reliable source of revenue for the state. This early lottery contained the essential seed of bingo: numbers,…

No comments yet. Log in to reply on the Fediverse. Comments will appear here.