Bingo hall offers starter kits with private room in effort to attract younger players - Action News
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PEI

Bingo hall offers starter kits with private room in effort to attract younger players

A Charlottetown bingo hall has come up with a plan to enticecustomers who may never have played bingo before: a bingo starter kit.

'Bingo is a fading activity, and unfortunately it doesn't need to be that way'

Players will have a more intimate experience and get a chance to learn the ropes in Bingo Country's private room, says manager Kyle Hambly. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

A bingo hall in Charlottetown has come up with a plan to enticecustomers who may never have played bingo before.

KiwanisBingo Country on Riverside Drive is closed during current COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, but hopes to reopen soon to players old and new with aprivate room, a bingo starter kit and a tutorial.

"It's often considered a game for a senior class of individuals it's not widespread through the younger demographic," said Kyle Hambly, the manager at Bingo Country, speaking with Mainstreet P.E.I.'s Angela Walker.

"We don't see a lot of new players."

He said the game is about 100 years old and is well known across North America and Europe.

Because it requires concentration, he said it tends to not be a social game, but Bingo Country wants to change that.

'Have a little fun'

So the hall hasdeveloped an introductory packagein a private room that people can book. Their bingo "starter kit" includesthe room, bingo cards, dabbers, and a drink from the canteen.

My hope is to see the game stay alive. Kyle Hambly

"It just creates an atmosphere where they're not in the rest of the bingo hall ... it enables them to speak with each other, to learn, to laugh, to have a little fun," without disrupting other players, he said.

A staff member will beon hand to explain how to playincluding more complex games such as bonanza or "hot ball."

The package includes promotional "bingo bucks" to entice players to come back.

They did a few successful test runs earlier this month, Hambly said.

"My hope is to see the game stay alive," hesaid. "Bingo is a fading activity, and unfortunately it doesn't need to be that way."

The bingo hall is currently closed because P.E.I. is in a period ofCOVID-19 circuit-breaker restrictions, and will open when public health authorities allow.

"My hope is that we can reintroduce the game ... and people will use it as a form of entertainment," Hambly said.

More from CBC P.E.I.

With files from Mainstreet P.E.I.