A free online bingo caller built for the room.
Call bingo from any browser — 75-ball, 90-ball, 50-ball, a quick 25-number round, or a custom range you set yourself. No login, no app, no setup. When the room is ready, switch to presentation mode and the called number fills the screen.
Quick answer
Roue is a free, number-only bingo caller that runs in your browser and looks intentional on a big screen. Pick a range (Quick 25, 50-ball, Classic 75, UK 90, or custom), press Call next, and the caller draws a fresh number each time with no repeats. It's built for classrooms, family game nights, and live events where the caller is at the front of the room — not for generating printed player cards or calling the B-I-N-G-O letters.
Ball ranges it calls
Switch range any time — changing it resets the board so a number from an old round can't sneak into a new one.
| Range | Numbers | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Quick · 25 | 1–25 | Short classroom rounds, warm-ups |
| 50-ball | 1–50 | Mid-length games, smaller groups |
| Classic · 75 | 1–75 | US-style bingo |
| UK · 90 | 1–90 | UK bingo-hall format |
| Custom | Any min–max | Themed or non-standard games |
How to run a game
- Open the caller and switch to the Bingo mode if it isn't already selected.
- Pick your range — Quick 25, 50-ball, Classic 75, UK 90, or Custom.
- Hand out cards (printed or physical) for that same range. Roue calls numbers; players mark their own cards.
- Press Presentation to go full-screen on a projector or shared display when the room is ready.
- Press Call next for each draw. The current number shows large in the orb; the board and recent-calls strip track what's been called.
- When someone wins, press Reset to start a new game on the same range. Press ESC to leave presentation mode.
Presentation mode for the big screen
A caller is only useful if the room can read it. Presentation mode scales the current-call orb up to fill the screen and strips away the surrounding controls, so the number is legible from the back of a classroom or hall. State carries over from your normal session — set up small, then go big. It's the same presentation treatment Roue gives its spin wheel and other modes.
Where this caller is NOT the right pick
If you need the B-I-N-G-O letter calls (announcing "B-7" rather than just "7"), Roue is number-only — a dedicated 75-ball caller will suit you better.
If you need to generate or auto-dab player cards, Roue doesn't do that today. It's the caller at the front of the room; players bring their own cards.
If you need synced cards across players' phones (everyone dabbing on their own device, auto-verified wins), a dedicated multiplayer bingo platform is the better tool. Roue is built around one screen everyone watches.
Who it's for
Teachers running a quick numbers game, hosts at a family night, event MCs warming up a room, care-home and community-group organizers, and anyone who wants a clean caller on a screen without installing anything. If you also pick names, roll dice, or need a random number, those live in the same tool — see the classroom guide for how the modes fit together.
Frequently asked questions
Is Roue's bingo caller free?
Yes. The bingo caller is free with no login and no app install — open the page and start calling. Pro ($5.99/month or $59/year) removes the small ads and unlocks extras across the whole tool, but every ball range, the presentation mode, and unlimited calling are all in the free tier.
Which bingo formats does it call?
Five ranges: Quick 25 (1–25, for short rounds), 50-ball (1–50), Classic 75 (1–75, the US format), UK 90 (1–90, the British bingo-hall format), and a Custom range where you set any minimum and maximum you like. Switching range resets the board so old calls can't carry over.
Does it use the B-I-N-G-O letter columns?
No — Roue's caller is number-only. It calls and displays the plain number (e.g. 47) rather than a letter-and-number combo (e.g. B-7). If your players are using printed 75-ball cards with letter columns, the number still matches the cell; the caller just doesn't announce the letter. If you specifically need letter calls, a traditional 75-ball-only caller is a better fit.
How are the numbers drawn?
Each call is drawn at random from the numbers that haven't been called yet, so there are never repeats within a game. The board fills in as you go and a running count shows how many of the total have been called. Press Reset to start a fresh game on the same range.
Can I use it on a projector or shared screen?
Yes. Presentation mode blows the current-call orb up to fill the screen (the number renders large enough to read from the back of a room) and hides the surrounding chrome. Press it when the room is ready, call from there, and press ESC to drop back to the normal view.
Does it print or generate player cards?
Not yet — Roue calls the numbers; it doesn't generate or auto-dab player cards. Players use their own printed or physical cards (or any card generator), and Roue is the caller at the front of the room. Card generation isn't on the page today.
Open the caller. Pick a range. Start calling.
Free, no login, works on the device you're reading this on.
Open the bingo caller →Last updated: May 2026.
