Your cart is currently empty!
Cashman Double Bingo Sun & Moon
Similar Games:
Cashman Bingo
Risk Scale:
Orange/Red (often dependent on your starting board; could be as much as 300x the bet or more)
Minimum Play:
Perhaps even more difficult to give a black-and-white explanation than Cashman Bingo. Generally, you want two or three spots that would yield bingo on both boards, but it’s more nuanced than that. Keep an eye on the coin values relative to the bet.
Other:
This game can sometimes take much longer to hit than you might initially think.
Oh God, they took regular bingo and made it crazy. Here, you generally want both boards pretty full; otherwise, you’d need one board to be really full with big coins.
Yes, I realize “pretty full” and “really full” are far from exact thresholds. This is one of a few games you’ll have to experiment with.
Neither of the examples below are enough to play:
I’ll blow the second photo up since it’s hard to see everything:

Now, if the red “sun” board in the second photo were combined with the “moon” blue board from the first, I’d be interested. It’s a tricky game to explain exactly what a minimum play is (my videos attempt to do that).
Just know that you’ll generally want to have at least a couple of bingo possibilities on both boards, and don’t forget about the same thoughts from the original bingo as far as coin values relative to what you’re betting. Just having a lot of coins isn’t enough if the vast majority of them are low value.
As you might expect, it’s tougher to hit bingo in this game than in the original. That’s why you really want to have both boards providing bingo possibilities or one with massive potential — such as a major and other big-value offerings — to make up for all that spinning you may have to do.
When you spin, you can either get red coins (sun board), blue coins (moon board), or hybrid coins (both boards). When you hit bingo on one board, that board becomes fully reset, although the other board won’t change.
This game in particular makes more sense with videos, which you can find here: