Small group competition
The 2 to 6 player format works well for friends, remote teams, study groups, and families who want a short shared game with a clear winner.
Start with the kind of friend round you need
Bingo works best when friends want one shared board, one shared pace, and instant reactions without a long rules explanation.
¡Completa 3 líneas para ganar!
Cada jugador recibe un cartón 5×5 con números del 1 al 25.
Cuando se llama un número, márcalo en tu cartón.
¡El primero en completar 3 líneas (fila, columna o diagonal) gana!
Shared-screen call game
Open it when friends on a call want one board everyone can react to at the same time.
First round before louder party picks
Use Bingo as the easy opener before roulette-style penalties or higher-energy rematches.
Short rivalry with rematches
One round stays short enough for best-of-three sessions, class breaks, or fast group resets.
1. Arrange your board
Use the setup timer to strengthen center and diagonal lines.
2. Pick numbers carefully
Advance your own lines while avoiding easy completions for opponents.
3. Complete 3 lines
Rows, columns, and diagonals all count toward the win condition.
Q. ¿Cuántos jugadores máximo?
A. 2 a 6 jugadores pueden jugar juntos.
Q. ¿Cómo se reorganiza el tablero?
A. Haz clic en dos casillas para intercambiar posiciones durante los 20 segundos.
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🎰 Este es un juego solo para multijugador.
Back to Home →MojoMini game guide
Use Bingo when friends want more than a quick picker but still need a low-friction shared round everyone can follow on the same board. MojoMini Bingo adds a board setup phase and turn-based number choices, so the room gets real decisions without losing the familiar bingo rhythm.
Best group size
2 to 6 players
Setup time
2 to 3 minutes
Round style
Turn-based board strategy
Use when
Friends want one shared round instead of separate screens
The 2 to 6 player format works well for friends, remote teams, study groups, and families who want a short shared game with a clear winner.
Everyone understands the basic goal quickly, but the setup phase gives strategic players enough depth to stay interested.
Rounds are short enough for best-of-three formats, classroom review breaks, or team events where several people should get a chance to win.
Bingo is best for active small groups. For larger rooms, use it as a hosted screen-share activity or split into groups.
Choose Wheel or Ladder if you only need to pick names, order, roles, or rewards.
Create a lobby, share the room link, and let a small group play one or two rounds. The turn structure keeps the pace calm enough for voice chat.
Use the familiar bingo rhythm for short review sessions. Students can focus on matching and planning without learning complex controls.
Bingo gives younger and older players a common rule set, while the board setup phase adds just enough planning for repeat rounds.
¡Gira la ruleta! Ajusta los pesos para apuntar al resultado deseado.
¿A dónde irás? ¡Sube por la escalera y descubre tu destino!
¡Adivina el número oculto! Usa las pistas de Strike y Ball para deducirlo.