Tell us about the guests
Write a name and everything fun you know about each person — job, habits, nicknames, embarrassing stories. The more, the better the story.
Personalised bingo
Your party's guests become the bingo numbers.
No app for guests · Up to 25 in the story · Unlimited players
Swipe for your cards
Forget tired bingo cards with random numbers. In Story Bingo the night's story is about YOU — your guests, their embarrassing habits, nicknames and little disasters.
You tell us about each person. We write one coherent, hilarious tale where everyone appears and the numbers 1–90 hide naturally in the text. The host reads it aloud, guests cross off on their phones — and race to shout BINGO first.
Write a name and everything fun you know about each person — job, habits, nicknames, embarrassing stories. The more, the better the story.
We weave it into one personal tale where everyone appears in each other's scenes — with the bingo numbers hidden naturally. You get 3 versions and pick your favourite.
The host reads the story aloud at the party. Every time a number is mentioned, guests cross it off. Five in a row = BINGO!
A real example
An example: 5 guests, a few funny facts about each — and we write this story. The bingo numbers 1–90 hide in the text, ready to read aloud.
Welcome, welcome, to the garden where Uncle Dave is turning 60, and where the grass has been mowed to exactly 4 centimetres because the birthday boy spent 25 minutes measuring it with a ruler. The sun is out at a glorious 23 degrees, the fairy lights are strung across all 8 fence posts, and somewhere a sausage is sizzling at precisely the wrong temperature.
Let's start with the man himself. Uncle Dave climbed onto a wobbly chair at 2 o'clock sharp and announced he'd be saying "just a few words." Those few words lasted 47 minutes. Somewhere around minute 19 he claimed, "I'll have you know I was the best footballer this town ever produced — I once scored 5 goals in 7 minutes!" Then he cried at his own punchline, dabbing his eyes while his 3 dogs — sadly left at home guarding 12 chew toys — howled in spirit. "I love every single one of you," he wept, "all 34 of you who showed up."
Halfway down the table sits Grandma Pearl, 81 years young, surrounded by 16 cakes, 9 trays of scones and 2 suspiciously tall trifles. "I baked since 6 this morning, love," she beamed, sliding her 40th sausage roll onto a plate. "And I never touch a drop — never have in 60 years." Yet her teacup, refilled 7 times, smelled of brandy strong enough to strip paint off Gary's trailer. When Dave shouted, "Pearl, do you want a sandwich?" she answered, "No thank you, I've already fed the 3 cats" — which confused everyone, because she owns 2 budgies named after footballers.
Enter Cousin Chloe, phone held high, narrating to her 78 loyal followers. "Hey besties, day 21 of my wellness journey," she purred, angling the camera 45 degrees for the light. On her plate: 11 leaves of kale and a single cherry tomato. "I only eat salad now." But the moment Gary turned his back, her hand shot out and nicked 14 chips off his plate in under 3 seconds. "I didn't see anything," she insisted, mouth full. She then asked Pearl to "do a little wave for the 'gram," and Pearl replied, "Tuesday, I think," which got 29 likes anyway.
Then there's brother-in-law Gary, the DIY menace, who arrived towing a trailer so enormous it took up 6 parking spaces and flattened 2 of Dave's prize gnomes. "Brand new power drill," he boasted. "18 volts of pure muscle, and I only paid a fortune because the cheap one was 1 pound dearer!" Within 10 minutes he'd offered to fix the wobbly chair, which then collapsed entirely, taking down 5 balloons. "That was already broken," Gary declared, as it broke further. He spent the next 22 minutes complaining that the burger buns cost 80 pence each.
And tucked in the corner, lit only by a phone screen, sits little brother Max, 15 years old and 100% body spray. You could smell him from 30 metres, a cloud so thick the bees evacuated 2 flowerbeds. "Mmph," he replied when asked how school was. He'd been gaming for 13 hours straight and informed anyone within 4 feet that he was "basically a crypto genius." "I turned 50 pence into 70 pence," he grunted, "and then back into 20 pence, but that's the strategy." When Dave asked him to pass the ketchup, Max sighed like the world weighed 88 kilos and passed it 17 minutes later.
By 5 o'clock the chaos peaked. Gary's drill had dismantled the gazebo, Chloe was filming her journey while stealing Max's last 9 chips, Pearl had answered 13 questions wrong in a row, and Dave was halfway through speech number 2. "In conclusion," he sobbed — though he was only 32 seconds in — "may we all be this happy when we're 90." Max grunted in agreement, which everyone took as a deeply emotional moment.
So here's to Dave at 60, to Pearl's spiked tea, to Gary's 1-pound heartbreak, to Chloe's 21-day journey, and to Max emerging from his cave for a full 18 minutes. Now grab your bingo cards, my loves — and if Grandma Pearl shouts "house!" on number 60, just check whether she actually meant 16.
From the bride's nervous father to the best man who lost the ring — every guest at the table becomes a number on the card.
The guest of honour, the godmother and the far-too-honest little brother — a story the whole family laughs at together.
The boss, IT-Søren and the front desk — the office in-jokes become the night's bingo.
Story Bingo works for everything from an intimate dinner of 4 to a big company party of 100+. You write up to 25 guests into the story — and there's no limit to how many can scan the QR code or type the code and play along. Everyone plays on their own phone, so you can be as many as you like.
The story is about your guests — not random numbers from a bucket.
Scan or type the code, type your name, play. That's the whole setup.
The host view throws the story, standings and BINGO cheers onto a TV or projector.
Everyone sees who's closest to BINGO — on the big screen and on their own phone. Instant competition and cheers.