Editorial bingo cards (classic 75-ball: B 1-15, I 16-30, N 31-45 + FREE, G 46-60, O 61-75) rendered into three editorial designer layouts. Pick from Brutalist(a white card with a heavy 3-pt black border, Courier monospace, a “BINGO.SYSTEM/v1.0 · CARD 00471” system header, and a “>> PRINT, PLAY, DISCARD. DO NOT LAMINATE.” footer rule), Swiss(cream cardstock with a tiny “Bingo.” eyebrow, a massive 75 with a red period full-stop, hairline grid rules and a small red dot in the FREE cell — modernist minimalism), or Bauhaus (off-white card with a red circle, yellow square, and blue triangle in the title block, “BINGO” right-aligned with a thick black underbar, primary-color BINGO header cells, and scattered red/yellow/blue accent cells inside the 5×5). Drop in your own photo or logo to brand the FREE cell. Print 1, 2, or 4 cards per page. Calling cards and markers come standard.
Standard 75-ball bingo, with editorial restraint.
One person calls, drawing numbers from the Call Sheet PDF (or picking from a hat). Players cover matching squares using the Markers PDF (cut out, or use coins/chips). First to five in a row in any direction shouts bingo and wins. The center FREE cell counts as covered for everyone.
With a logo uploaded, the FREE cell shows your image instead — a way to brand cards for fundraisers, classrooms, design studios, or any event where you want guests holding something more deliberately styled than the grocery-store standard.
When to use the Editorial styles.
Brutalist, Swiss, and Bauhaus pull from twentieth-century graphic design rather than from the grocery-store bingo aisle. The numbers are still classic 75-ball; the visual treatment is the difference.
Editorial works for design-studio holiday parties, museum membership events, architecture-firm offsites — anywhere the audience will notice the typography. For events with kids, the Fun Designs or Playful styles read warmer.
Looking for a themed kit instead? Try our full bingo template hub for printables covering every major holiday and event. You might also like our Vintage style, logo bingo generator, or the icebreaker bingo kit for office mixers.
Frequently asked.
What does “editorial” bingo mean?
These three styles take design cues from editorial design (magazines, museum posters, corporate identity systems) instead of from kid-party clip art. Brutalist is the system-monospace look; Swiss is Helvetica modernism; Bauhaus is primary-colors-and-geometry. The 75-ball numbers underneath are unchanged.
Is this card design good for adults?
Yes — these are the most adult-friendly designer styles on the site. Pair them with a wine-tasting bingo round, a corporate offsite, a graphic-design studio social, or a museum members’ night and the cards read as deliberate aesthetic choices rather than party-game leftovers.
Will the bold black-and-white print well?
Yes. Brutalist and Swiss use mostly black-and-white with a single accent, which means they print identically on a $50 monochrome laser as on a $400 inkjet. Bauhaus needs color to keep its primary palette but reproduces accurately on any consumer color printer.
Can I use these for a corporate event?
Editorial is the design family most often picked for corporate use. Drop your company logo in the FREE square, print on white cardstock, and the cards drop cleanly into a conference welcome bag, an offsite dinner, or a sales-kickoff icebreaker without needing decoration.
