What better way to explore a world of infinite possibilities than to play bingo? While Infinite Craft itself is a game that has you merging hundreds, upwards of thousands of items together, the community has banded together to create unofficial minigames to add some competitive flair to the mix.
What is Infinite Craft Bingo?
Infinite Craft bingo allows you to compete with other players or challenge yourself to fill randomized bingo boards. Your goal is to look at your bingo card and merge objects until you create one on the list. You’ll win the round and start again by completing a column, row, or diagonal line.
As of now, there are no sites that automate this process, and there is no official Infinite Craft bingo game on the Neal.fun site. Instead, you can use websites like Bingo Baker to create your own or sites like Bingosync to compete live against other players. For the sake of simplicity, let’s head to Bingo Baker for a quick example.
Create your own Infinite Craft bingo board
To create your own Infinite Craft bingo board, head over to Bingo Baker and follow these steps:
- Title your bingo board however you wish.
- Select a square and type in a word.
- Use the toolbar next to the square to customize your font and square color to your preference.
- Repeat this for every square aside from the “Free” space.
Below is an example of a bingo board I made recently. By listing 24 random items, you and your friends playing Infinite Craft can race to finish a line first or see who can find every word. Depending on your preference, you can also set a time limit, change the board size, or use one someone else created to see if you can complete it. To make things more exciting, try to include words with numerous steps so you don’t end the game after making many simple elements.
Similarly, with a site like Bingosync, you can play Infinite Craft bingo live with others using the same board by joining a multiplayer room and creating a custom, randomized game. Like before, you’ll manually paste items to find, with the site creating the board and making the room for you and others to join. From here, whoever hosts the match determines the words you use, game rules, and other parameters. You can go as easy as a lake or as complicated as making Peter Griffin if you want an extra layer of challenge.