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BonusBell platform reviews combine structured catalog data, primary-source verification, and editorial analysis so users can understand not just what a platform offers, but how confident we are in the claims on the page.
Reviewed By
BonusBell Casino Desk
Fact-Checked
2026-04-08
Last Updated
2026-04-08
Sources Used
4 cited sources
Bingo Tour is a skill-bingo mobile app developed by AviaGames. Before getting into the usual review sections, readers should understand the legal history around the publisher, because it materially affects the trust question.
Bingo Tour is a skill-bingo mobile app developed by AviaGames. Before getting into the usual review sections, readers should understand the legal history around the publisher, because it materially affects the trust question.
Bingo Tour is published by AviaGames and distributed through the Apple App Store and Google Play. Like Bingo Cash and Blackout Bingo, it is not a licensed iCasino — it operates under the skill-game legal theory, with cash tournaments pitched as contests of skill. The core loop is head-to-head bingo against other players for real-money entry fees.
New players are typically offered a small bonus cash credit on first deposit. The operator does not publicly disclose a fixed headline bonus amount, and terms rotate. Bonus cash is restricted to tournament entries and is not independently withdrawable.
Bingo Tour is built around speed tournaments rather than traditional 75-ball or 90-ball rooms. Matches are short, power-ups drive scoring, and players receive identical ball sequences so results depend on reaction time and daubing efficiency.
Deposits and withdrawals run through PayPal and card processors. Withdrawals require identity verification. The operator does not publicly disclose average processing times; third-party reviews have reported multi-day holds.
Daily login bonuses, tournament ladders, and time-limited events are the main ongoing mechanics. There is no formal state-licensed VIP program.
This is where Bingo Tour stands apart from every other app in this roundup, and it is the section prospective players should read most carefully. In late 2023 and early 2024, a federal jury in the Northern District of California returned a verdict against AviaGames in a patent infringement case brought by Skillz Platform Inc. The jury awarded Skillz $42.9 million after finding AviaGames had willfully infringed six claims of US Patent No. 9,649,564. The verdict is publicly documented by Bloomberg Law, Law360, PocketGamer.biz, and VentureBeat, among other outlets.
Separately, Skillz publicly alleged during discovery that AviaGames deployed bots against paying human players — internal communications referenced a 'shark robot' designed to target users who were winning too much. Those allegations, which AviaGames has disputed, prompted reporting by GamesBeat about a federal investigation into the company's practices, and a separate putative class action (Pandolfi et al v. AviaGames Inc.) was filed in connection with the bot claims. Skillz and AviaGames subsequently reached a publicly disclosed patent settlement. These are facts from court filings and public reporting, not speculation.
Players considering Bingo Tour should weigh this history directly. Unlike BetMGM, Borgata, BetRivers, and DraftKings — which are regulated by state gaming commissions and subject to external audit — AviaGames operates under the skill-game framework and is not supervised by a US gaming regulator.
The app itself is polished and the matchmaking is fast. The core bingo loop is fun and competently built. The user-experience problem is not visual — it is the reasonable question of who exactly you are playing against given the publicly litigated bot allegations, which the operator has not comprehensively rebutted on its public site.
We cannot recommend Bingo Tour with the same confidence as a state-licensed iCasino bingo product or even a Skillz-platform title like Blackout Bingo. The gameplay is solid, but the publisher's documented litigation history — a $42.9 million willful infringement verdict, a publicly reported bot fraud investigation, and a follow-on class action — is a meaningful strike against the trust layer that matters most when you are putting real money on the line. Players who still want to try it should stick to the lowest entry tiers and treat any deposit as entertainment spend.
Bingo Tour is one of the player-facing brands BonusBell tracks across bingo.
It is an active product in the current BonusBell catalog, with public-facing operations associated with San Francisco, CA, USA. Bingo Tour is currently categorized by BonusBell under bingo. The current catalog says players can expect Multiplayer bingo tournaments. Distinct hooks currently tracked by BonusBell include Global multiplayer tournaments; AviaGames platform.
Bingo Tour currently advertises Entry-based. That line is useful as a quick hook, but users usually need more context around playthrough, expiry, qualifying wager size, and whether the offer is actually the best reason to sign up. No verified VIP ladder is attached to this platform record right now, so long-term loyalty value should be treated as unverified until stronger sourcing is attached.
Banking details are still uneven in the underlying catalog, which is a meaningful caution flag for anyone comparing operators primarily on redemption speed or cashier flexibility. Even when the catalog does not expose every term, users still need this section because actual value depends on how easy it is to fund, verify, and cash out, not just on promotional copy.
Bingo Tour operates as a regulated real-money product. When a platform is in this category, the practical questions are licensing footprint, banking reliability, and whether the offer terms still justify the account. The current license note in the catalog reads: Licensed in: Skill-based gaming.
Bingo Tour does not yet expose a fully detailed support and payments stack inside the catalog, which is itself useful context for users who care about trust and operational maturity. Current catalog signals put it at 4.8 rating with a 81/100 trust score. Those are only as strong as the source data behind them, so the rest of this page should be read as the evidence layer behind the headline number.
For most users, the real test is whether Bingo Tour offers enough product depth, regional access, and reliable banking to justify joining a wallet already crowded with major operators. Bingo Tour should be judged on the full operating picture: product quality, regional access, banking clarity, bonus terms, and whether the evidence on the page is strong enough to trust. Until every field is source-backed, this review should be treated as a structured starting point rather than a final verdict.
BonusBell tracks both where this platform operates and how much its verified recurring offers can realistically be worth over a normal week.
Review coverage: Verified. Bonus coverage: None found.
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Editor's Verdict
Proceed with awareness - Bingo Tour has excellent 4.8-star rating (214K reviews) and appealing gameplay but Avia Games class action regarding bot matching warrant caution despite strong reviews
Last reviewed: April 2026 · BonusBell Editorial Team
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