Eurovision Bingo Cards - Print Free or Customize
Print free Eurovision bingo cards or adjust them, limitless prints! Select from 31,300+ designs or use our bingo card generator. Add numbers, phrases, photos, or any combination. Play using PDF prints, online bingo cards, and our online bingo caller, or combine all formats.
About: Get ready for a night of glitz, quirky humor, and unpredictable moments with this ultimate Eurovision bingo card. Perfect for fans hosting a viewing party or anyone who loves the spectacle of Europe’s most iconic song contest, this card captures everything from outrageous costumes and heartfelt ballads to inside jokes and classic voting drama. It's all about fun, friendly competition, and celebrating the unique chaos that is Eurovision.
How To: To download a PDF to print, click the Print button. You can modify the number of cards and other print options on the Print tab. Grid items and free space content can be edited on the Basic tab. Appearance can be exactly customized on the relevant tabs, or you can quickly locate any setting using the 🔍 tab.
How to play Eurovision Bingo Cards?
- Paper Players: Print PDF bingo cards and manually mark the cards.
- Digital Players: Click on the Play button above, and then click on the 🎫 button.
- Digital Caller: Click on the Play button above.
- Paper Caller: Print PDF calling list & calling slips and manually select the slips.
- Hybrid Play: Select any combination above. For example, caller can be either Paper or Digital. And players can be Paper or Digital or a combo of both.
Step-By-Step:
- Start by saving the Eurovision Bingo PDF by clicking on the "Print" button above.
- Open the PDF and print it.
- For random calling, you can print another copy of the call list, cut, fold and then draw them randomly at play time.
- Cut the bingo cards at the cut marks if there are greater than 1 bingo cards per page.
- Distribute one card per player. For marking, you can use crayons. Crayons are the cheapest.
- Select one person to be the caller. If you are playing in a small group, the caller may as well play along with their own Bingo card.
- The caller opens the game by randomly picking an item from the call list and announcing it to everyone.
- The players scan their cards to see if they have the called word. If they do, they dab that word.
- The first player to finish a horizontal, vertical, or a diagonal line of crossed items shouts "Bingo!" and wins the play.
- The caller checks that the items marked form a proper line as per the Bingo card and call list.
- You can play for multiple patterns or a full card blackout for a longer play.
This Eurovision Bingo Cards Game contains following Words or Phrases: "____ are favorites to win", "[Country] hasn't won Eurovision since[Year]", "City of Music", "La La La", A country gives Germany 0 points, A country gives the UK 0 points, A country performing in a foreign language, A country performing in their own, uncommon language, A Disco ball, A joke about Australia being in Europe, A jokey song, A Message of peace, A Nordic country giving another Nordic country top points, A Nordic country performs a weirdass song, A power ballad, A reference to Germany's inability to win, A remote broadcaster tells bad joke and then waits uncomfortably for laughter, A song about love, A song about peace, A song alluding to a national tragedy, A song switches into English, A violin, A visually confounding performance, ABBA reference, Ad for Eurovision album, An avant garde costume, An awkward contestant interview, An ugly hat, Avant garde makeup choices, Booing, Broadcast issues, Clappy bit, Conchita Wurst, Confetti, Contestant cries angry tears, Contestant cries happy tears, Cringey attempts at sexiness, Cultural costumes, Cyprus giving Greece the most points, Euro EDM, Event host tells terrible joke, Explanation of scoring system, Fake rain, Feathers, flag facepaint, Glitter, Graham Norton snarks about a song being bad, Graham snarks about a broadcaster's outfit, Greece giving Cyprus the most points, Historical feuds impacting voting, Host outfit change, Joke about UK's song being in German, Mesh clothing, Mid-song costume change, Near seizure-inducing lighting, Neighboring countries voting for each other, Politically-motivated voting, Pyro, Reference to a contestant's age, Reference to Mozart, Reference to Wiener Schnitzel, References to Phoenixes, References to Sweden's success, Remote announcers experience broadcast delay, Singing out of tune, Someone pretends to play instrument, Someone thanks host country, Spandex, Suggestive choreography, Synchronized dancing, The UK gets more than 50 points, un-bleeped swearing, Vague references to the state of the world, Wardrobe malfunctions, White person rapping, Wind machine, Winking.