Tea Time Bingo Review

Before tea was brought to Britain, the English had (in my opinion) only two main meals. Those were breakfast and dinner. During the middle of the 18th century, dinner which was a massive meal was shifted from noontime to evening. What I found surprising was that the afternoon tea ritual was started by the French in the 17th century; it was extremely popular. Actually, tea first arrived in Paris in 1636, 22 years before England where tea became popular a bit later. That happened in the period when Queen Anne chose to drink tea instead of ale as a regular breakfast drink. According to some stories, Duchess of Bedford is the creator of afternoon tea-time. Since the noon meal had become very light, for her standards I guess, she had “a sinking feeling” at about four o’clock in the afternoon. So, she called her friends to join her and the tradition was created.

Good stuff takes time and such was my experience with Tea Time Bingo. The first time I played there wasn’t memorable but now, the situation has changed for the better. So I entered the 90-ball bingo room for a very simple reason – there were less players. The first few games weren’t promising but everything started to improve slowly. In the fourth game I played I was one to go winner, and in the next two games I was winner in the Any Line game and more importantly I didn’t have to share my winnings; £5.46 and £5.63 were all mine. My absolute peak happened two games later when I was a winner in the Any Two Lines game scoring £9.43 and one to go winner in the Full House part. Considering my luck lately these wins were huge, I tell ya that. I played only one more game and I didn’t win anything. It was time to chill and have a cup of tea; I felt so British.

Markotik

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