Fruity King is, at heart, a casino. The bingo lobby is real, the games are good, and the welcome bonus is generous-ish, but the rest of the site keeps reminding you where its priorities sit.
It’s a ProgressPlay brand, and the bingo runs on Playtech, but Fruity King leans hard on the casino and sports sides of the operation, with bingo sitting beside them rather than out in front. New players get £50 in bingo bonus money for a £10 deposit, with a friendly 2x playthrough attached. We’re giving it a 3 out of 5 score. Read the rest of our review to find out why!
Fruity King Bingo Key Facts
| Site Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Welcome Offer: | £50 bingo bonus |
| No Deposit Bonus: | No |
| Bonus Codes: | None for the welcome offer; weekly codes for deals |
| Minimum Deposit: | £10 |
| Minimum Withdrawal: | £5 |
| Software: | Playtech Virtue Fusion bingo |
| Established: | 2014 |
| Operator: | ProgressPlay Ltd |
| Live Chat: | Yes |
Welcome Offer
The Fruity King Bingo welcome offer is a chunky one. Drop a tenner into the bingo cashier and the site adds £50 in bingo bonus funds to your balance, five times your deposit, ready to spend across the rooms.
There’s no code to enter. You opt in, you deposit, and the bonus is there. It’s a single first-deposit deal, UK players only, and Skrill or Neteller deposits don’t trigger it.
Use the bingo cashier rather than the casino one, because Fruity King runs separate welcome offers for each. If you take the bingo route the £50 is yours, take the casino route and a different deal applies. Keep that in mind if you want the bingo offer.
Bonus Wagering
The terms are friendlier than you’d guess from a bonus of this size.
Twice the bonus value needs to go through bingo before it converts, which is about as kind as casino playthroughs get (aside from no wagering spins or tickets). Only your bonus stakes count toward that figure, your cash is wagered first, and the 30-day timer begins ticking the moment £50 hits your account.
Where it pinches is the conversion ceiling. Whatever the £50 turns into, only triple the starting bonus can ever transfer to withdrawable cash, capping the upside at £150, no matter how lucky the rooms get. Try to cash out before the wagering completes, and the bonus disappears along with anything it earned, which is the trap most players hit first. Get the playthrough done before going near the withdrawal button.
Promo Codes
The welcome offer doesn’t need a promo code, but Fruity King does run codes on some of its day-to-day bingo deals. The Bingo Weekend Booster, for example, asks you to deposit £10 with a weekend code and wager £5 on bingo, after which you collect 50 free bingo tickets and 10 free spins.
Both the codes themselves and the values they unlock rotate, so Fruity King’s promotions page is the only reliable guide to what’s on offer this week. We don’t post the codes here because they change frequently (several times a month) and it’s best to just look on the official site. There are no ‘secret codes’ that sites have to give players for better deals.
First Impressions
The landing page sets a tone that the rest of the site doesn’t quite live up to. The branding leans on a crowned smartphone with spinning reels, which is a reference to a more retro era of mobile casino design that has aged a bit.
Step inside, and the look changes. The lobby drops to a darker, more functional palette that doesn’t match the brighter homepage at all, and the join between the two reads as a site that’s been pieced together over time rather than designed from the top down. We spotted a couple of small layout glitches along the way, too. Nothing broken, but enough to chip at the polish. The lobby itself is ProgressPlay, which is shared between more or less every white-label site on the network. It’s not bad, there’s just nothing unique about it.
None of this means Fruity King is poorly made. The navigation works, the bingo lobby filters cleanly, and the cashier behaves the way you’d hope. It just doesn’t feel as freshly built as the better newer brands, and on a site you’re trusting with your card details, presentation matters more than it should.
Bingo on a Casino Site?
Here’s the thing to understand before you sign up. Fruity King has put serious work into the casino, the slots and the sportsbook side. Bingo is a real product here, but it’s clearly the smaller part of the business.
The clearest signal is the promotions page. Filter it for bingo and you’ll see a thin selection of three or four offers, padded out with what are really just game adverts. Switch the same page to casino, slots or live and the volume of real deals expands sharply. Players who want a rich bingo promotions calendar will feel short-changed. Players who came for slots with a side of bingo will be very happy.
That’s the honest read is this, and it shapes how to think about the welcome offer too. The £50 bingo bonus is good for a one-time hit. What it doesn’t buy you is a steady flow of bingo-specific reasons to come back next week. This might appeal to bonus chasers or people who really want to play the casino and grab the slots promos, but if you want regular bingo engagement and exclusives, this isn’t the one.
Bonuses and Promotions
What’s actually running on the bingo side rotates often, so treat the run below as a recent look rather than a fixed list, and check Fruity King’s bingo promotions page for the current deals.
- Make It A Bingo Deal in May – a monthly headline event, Friday to Sunday nights in the Deal or No Deal 90 Room, with a £20,000 escalator jackpot per night and £300,000 across the month
- £20,000 Prize Rush Bingo Wednesdays – Wednesday 8pm to 10pm in the Bingo Bonanza Room, 21 fast games with multiple line and full house prizes per round, ticket prices 5p and 10p
- Bingo Weekend Booster – 50 free bingo tickets and 10 free spins for a coded £10 deposit and £5 of bingo play, Friday to Sunday
- Monday Fluffy Favourites Bingo – a guaranteed £5,000 Monday-night game in the Fluffy Favourites Bingo room, with the prize split 50-50 between the winner and the rest of the ticket holders
- Pennies to Hundreds – 1p and 2p tickets every Tuesday evening in the 90-ball network room, with prizes of £100 or more
A line worth noting is that the headline events, the Monthly Make It A Bingo Deal and the £20,000 Prize Rush, are network promotions that also appear at Fruity King’s ProgressPlay sister sites. Generous, yes, but not exclusive to here.
Bingo Rooms and Games
The bingo runs on Playtech’s long-established system, the same one that powers a chunk of the UK’s bigger halls, so the games themselves are a known quantity rather than a question mark. There are around fourteen rooms in the lobby when we logged in, organised by ball count and special format.
The core selection covers 90-ball, 80-ball and 75-ball games, plus the network’s quirkier 60-ball and 50-ball variants. Ticket prices stretch from 1p at the cheaper end to 25p in the bigger games, so a couple of hours of play doesn’t need to cost the earth. Three rooms worth flagging. Pub Quiz Bingo runs themed 75-ball patterns rather than straight lines, Weekly Night Out is the Saturday-evening showpiece with prizes building toward a five-figure progressive, and the Bingo Bonanza room holds the headline guaranteed jackpot games.
None of this is exclusive. As a Playtech licensee, the brand uses the standard network rooms, so pot sizes and player counts come from the wider system, not from Fruity King’s own following.
Slots and Casino
This is the part Fruity King built itself around. The slot count runs into the thousands, drawing on Play’n GO, Eyecon, Playtech, Red Tiger and the rest of the major studios, and the catalogue refreshes regularly with new releases.
The jackpot shelf is unusually deep, around 150 titles in a dedicated slots-jackpot section, headed by the Age of the Gods range and a long list of Red Tiger daily-drop games. Live dealer covers off the rest of the casino floor through Evolution, with the full set of roulette, blackjack and baccarat tables alongside the big live game shows. Card and table players get more variety here than they would at the smaller ProgressPlay bingo skins.
A small touch that desktop players appreciate is the side-games panel. While you’re in a bingo room, a slot will sit alongside the card so you can spin between calls, which is a tidy bit of multitasking.
Game Preview


Mobile Experience
Fruity King is built mobile-first, which fits the brand’s smartphone-in-a-crown logo. The site adapts cleanly to phones and tablets and keeps the lobby, the cashier, the rewards section and live help only a tap or two from any screen.
What’s missing is a dedicated app. There’s no Fruity King app on either the App Store or Google Play, which feels a touch behind the curve for a site that pitches itself at mobile players. There’s a mobile phone in the logo, but no mobile app?!
Play happens through your phone’s browser instead, and if you’d like the next best thing to an app icon, pinning the homepage to your home screen gets you a one-tap shortcut with no download involved.
Signup and Login
Registration is a fast job. A handful of basics, your name, date of birth, address and a password, and the account is open.
Verification runs quietly while you play. The site only steps in if it can’t auto-confirm your details, in which case you’ll upload a photo of your ID and something to prove where you live. A withdrawal won’t release until those are signed off. When you come back to play, the Fruity King login button is in the page header, top right of every screen.
Deposit Options
The cashier is well-stocked with payment options. Methods on offer include:
- Debit cards from Visa and Mastercard
- Skrill, Neteller and EcoPayz e-wallets
- PayPal
- Apple Pay
- Paysafecard and Neosurf prepaid options
- PayViaPhone for mobile billing
- Instant Bank Payments
Cards take £10 as a base minimum, but the wallets and Instant Bank lift the floor to £20, while Neosurf settles in between at £15. PayViaPhone is convenient for tiny top-ups, yet the 15% charge it carries makes it an expensive habit. Skrill and Neteller deposits won’t qualify you for the welcome bonus either.
Cashouts start from a low £5 minimum. Timing depends on the method you choose, with Skrill and Neteller usually arriving inside a day, EcoPayz, Apple Pay and Paysafecard sitting around three days, and debit cards or PayPal stretching to a week. The persistent gripe is the fee. Each withdrawal carries a 1% deduction with a £3 maximum, the kind of small charge most UK rivals manage without. Whatever path you used to deposit is the path the money returns down.
Licensing and Regulation
ProgressPlay Ltd, a Malta-incorporated operator, sits behind Fruity King’s UK Gambling Commission account 39335, which covers a large stable of casino and bingo brands. The site has been live since 2014, which makes it one of the longer-running names on that licence rather than a fresh skin.
The usual UK protections come with the territory. Player balances are kept apart from the company’s own money at the Commission’s “not protected” tier, which means in the unlikely event of an insolvency, the money isn’t fully guaranteed back, though day-to-day funds are ring-fenced. The account area carries the usual responsible-gambling toolkit, with caps for spend and time and the option to take a break or self-exclude entirely.
The support menu is the standard ProgressPlay set. Live chat is open 24/7 with a chatbot at the front door before a real agent picks up. Questions that can wait go by email to customersupport@instantgamesupport.com. There’s no phone number to ring, but between live chat and a fairly deep help centre, you can usually get what you need without one.
Sister Sites
Fruity King is one of well over a hundred brands on the ProgressPlay platform. The closest matches we’ve already reviewed include Queen’s Bingo, Vampire Bingo and Monster Casino, all of which run the same back-end and most of the same games, just with different branding wrapped around them.
For Fruity King specifically, Monster Casino is the closest cousin in spirit, since both sites lead with casino and treat bingo as the secondary lane. Vampire and Queen’s lean further toward the bingo audience, so a player who wants more dedicated bingo promotions and more of a bingo-first feel is better off looking at one of those instead.
If you’re looking for the industry leaders that use the same Playtech software, you will want to check out brands like Buzz and Mecca.
Review Conclusion
Pros
- A tenner buys a £50 bingo bonus,
Only 2x wagering on welcome offer
Playtech bingo with fourteen rooms covering 90, 80, 75, 60 and 50-ball variants
A deep slots library running into the thousands, plus full Evolution live dealer
Side-games panel that lets you spin slots alongside the bingo on desktop
Low £5 minimum withdrawal
Penny bingo and progressive jackpots in most of the network rooms
Cons
- The bingo promotions calendar is thin compared to the casino side
Cashouts carry a 1% house fee, max £3, unusual for a UK site
No dedicated app, despite the mobile-first branding
Visual mismatch between the brighter homepage and the darker lobby, with a slightly dated logo
Bingotastic Verdict
Fruity King Bingo lands as a decent, well-stocked site that doesn’t quite know whether it wants to be a bingo destination. Where it’s strong is the basics. The £50 welcome bonus is fair value, the 2x wagering is among the kinder requirements on the market, the Playtech bingo product plays well, and the slots and live casino libraries hold their own against any rival on the platform. The side-games panel is a small but smart touch.
Where it slips is the bingo identity. The promotions calendar is thin on the bingo side, no rooms are exclusive to the brand, the logo and the lobby don’t feel as polished as they could, and most UK rivals don’t tack a 1% charge on top of every cashout the way Fruity King does. A player who came here mainly for the bingo will probably find a better long-term fit elsewhere.
Three out of five is where it lands. There’s plenty to like about the site, the welcome offer especially, so it’s well worth a look. Just go in clear that Fruity King is a casino-led brand with a competent bingo lobby attached, rather than a bingo site in the truest sense.
