Bingo Craze: Golden Rush is a new bingo game for the iOS and Android platforms that plays like classic bingo, except with a significant twist. This game and those who developed it claim that you can win real life money by playing it. Not only that, but they claim that you can win a significant amount of money for not a whole lot of playing time.
Are you able to, though? Is Bingo Craze: Golden Rush a scam or legit? This is the question that we are going to be taking a deep dive into for the rest of this article.
To start, the gameplay is classic bingo without any real twists. There are no power ups to help you find more combos on the board. You simply wait for a ball with your number, then you tap the spot that corresponds.
You can play with multiple bingo tickets at a time, unlike most other mobile bingo games. You can play with either one, two, or four tickets; make sure that you are able to keep up with however many tickets you choose.
Unlike other bingo games that claim to earn you money, Bingo Craze: Golden Rushdoes not pit you against other players for wagering. Instead, you simply play a game of bingo on your own, and the winnings seem to pile up; in fact, they pile up very quickly.
Quick winnings and fast money, believe it or not, are actually generally a negative sign when it comes to figuring out whether the game is legit or a scam. If the developer paid out everybody who won, then they would go bankrupt immediately, so they’re definitely not paying everyone. Are they paying anyone?
To figure this out, go to the reviews in the App Store and see what people are saying. In the case of this game, people are saying that they are having a lot of trouble getting their money. Nobody has posted that they have actually gotten their money, but plenty of people have either said that it’s an endless loop of errors, or that they lost their data and had the rug pulled from under them.
The game claims that you can cash out once you hit $1000, which typically happens within less than an hour after downloading and beginning the game. As easy as it is to hit the threshold, it would be completely unsustainable for a developer to pay everybody who tried to cash out. That alone should make it obvious that they are not gonna pay.
With all of that being said, we feel confident in ruling that this game is a scam. There is simply no way to get the money that the game tells you that you are earning, or to earn it like the advertisements claim that you would be able to. This is simply just a semi-fun bingo game with a low pressure playing style and not too many advertisements.