Plenty of bingo sites pick a theme and then forget about it. Vampire Bingo does the opposite. Fanged hosts, moonlit rooms, blood-red accents, and a marketing voice that never once breaks character. It is, by some distance, the most committed gimmick we’ve come across. Props for that!
Strip away the gothic costume, and you will, however, find a familiar shape underneath. This is a ProgressPlay site running Playtech bingo, relaunched for 2026 after its old platform shut down. The theme is the differentiator. The games are not. New players get a £30 games bonus on a £10 deposit, and we’re scoring it 3/5.
Continue reading the review below and learn everything that went into giving the site that score…
Vampire Bingo Key Facts
| Site Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Welcome Offer: | £30 games bonus |
| Bonus Wagering: | 10x |
| No Deposit Play: | No |
| Minimum Deposit: | £10 |
| Minimum Withdrawal: | £5 |
| Bingo Software: | Playtech Virtue Fusion |
| Established: | Relaunched 2026 |
| Operator: | ProgressPlay |
| Live Chat: | Yes, 24/7 |
| Mobile App: | No |
| Bonus Codes: | None for the welcome offer; daily deals use codes (MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, TGIF, WEEKEND) |
Welcome Offer
A first deposit of £10 or more, made in the bingo cashier, unlocks a £30 games bonus you can spend on bingo and the mini games sat inside the bingo rooms. It’s a one-time offer on your first deposit, and deposits made with Skrill or Neteller don’t qualify.
It’s a fair rather than remarkable opener. The bonus carries 10x wagering and the most you can pull out of it is one times the bonus, so £30 of bonus converts to a maximum of £30 in cash. In our opinion, the £30 maximum conversion cap is a serious drawback and something you should pay attention to up front to avoid disappointment. You get 30 days to clear it, which is generous on time if not on the conversion cap.
Where the offer earns back some goodwill is what comes after it. The ongoing bingo bonuses are wagered far more lightly, so the welcome deal is the strict part and the regular rewards are the easy part, which is an unusual way round.
Bonus Wagering
The 10x requirement on the welcome bonus applies to bingo and the mini games, with the usual rule that contributions vary from one game to the next. Clear it inside 30 days and the bonus drops into your real balance, capped at a single times the original amount.
The reload deals tell a better story. The bingo-only bonuses, like the Wednesday and Friday codes, run at just 4x, which is reasonable enough for UK bingo. The mixed games bonuses, like the Monday and weekend codes, sit back at 10x. So if you stick to the pure bingo offers, the terms are decent-ish. Branch into the games bonuses, and you’re working harder, but the RTP on slots is significantly higher. Take your pick.
One thing to watch is the clock. Those reload bonuses expire two days after they land, so they reward players who are around to use them quickly rather than anyone dipping in once a week.
First Impressions
The theme hits you straight away. The palette is dark, lit with red, and every character on the site has a set of fangs and a bingo ball or two floating nearby. To lift the gloom, the game cards across the lobby are brightly coloured, which stops the whole thing tipping into murk.
It works, mostly. There’s real personality here, more than you get from the average white-label bingo room, and the look is consistent from the homepage to the cashier. The brand even gives you a cast of vampire hosts, Silas, Kyo, Dorian, Alistair and Thana, who pop up across the promotions.
If there’s a criticism, it’s that the brand believes its own hype a little too much. The copy bills this as “the only vampire themed UK bingo site” and piles on the puns until they lose their bite. The theme is a nice touch. It isn’t the reason to play, however hard the marketing insists it is. Keep that in mind.
From Cozy Games to ProgressPlay
Vampire Bingo has a past. It used to run on Cozy Games, a bingo platform that has since closed its doors, and it has been rebuilt for 2026 on the ProgressPlay licence instead. That relaunch is the most interesting thing about the site’s setup.
ProgressPlay is a Malta-based operator with a sprawling estate of UK-licensed brands, well north of 190 domains at the time of writing. The catch is that the overwhelming majority of those are slots and casino sites. Very few lead with bingo as their flagship, which makes Vampire one of a small group on the licence that actually puts the bingo hall front and centre.
For a player, the relaunch mostly means stability. The old Cozy Games rooms are gone, replaced by a Playtech bingo product that connects to a much larger network of players. It’s a more reliable foundation than the platform it left behind, even if it costs the site any claim to running something one-of-a-kind.
Promo Codes & Offers
This is a busy site, and the schedule splits neatly into two halves. There are the big timed jackpot events, and there are the smaller deposit bonuses you unlock with a code.
The main events are sizeable for a site this young. 50K Fridays runs in the Bingo Bonanza Room from 7pm to 11pm, with 10p tickets, and every game guarantees at least £1,000, with £50,000 promised across the night. Prize Rush Wednesdays put £20,000 through the same room between 8pm and 10pm using a format that spreads several prizes across each line and full house. On top of those sits a rotating monthly spectacular. May’s version, 300K May Madness, ran an escalating £20,000 nightly jackpot in the Deal or No Deal 90 Room across Friday to Sunday, with the winning threshold easing as the night wore on. Each month brings a fresh, time-limited version of that headline event. These are network games/promotions, but they are good.
The deposit bonus codes are simpler. Each is tied to a day and claimed with a £10 deposit through the bingo cashier:
- MONDAY – 25% games bonus up to £25
- WEDNESDAY – £5 bingo bonus
- TGIF – 25% bingo bonus up to £25, every Friday
- WEEKEND – £10 games bonus on Saturdays and Sundays
Beyond the bonuses, there’s a proper rewards programme. You earn points by completing missions, climbing levels and collecting badges, then spend the points in a store on bingo bonuses, free spins and cashback, with leaderboard competitions running alongside. It adds a layer of progression that the welcome offer alone doesn’t hint at.
As ever with this kind of calendar, the line-up rotates, and individual offers can change or end without much notice, so it’s worth checking the live promotions page before you bank on any single deal.
Bingo Rooms and Games
The lobby is the strongest part of the product. It filters cleanly into All Bingo, Bingo 90, Bingo 75/80 and Specials, and each room shows its ticket price, prize and countdown at a glance, so finding a game to suit your budget takes seconds.

The room list mixes the everyday with the branded. You’ll find staples like Bingo Bonanza, Lucky Lane and Bingo Blitz, recognisable Playtech rooms such as Clover Rollover and Fluffy Favourites Bingo, and novelty formats including Fish & Chips Frenzy, Bouncy Balls Bingo and a Deal or No Deal room. Scheduled big games round it out, with a Daily Big One built around a £5,000 prize plus weekly and monthly specials carrying larger pools. Tickets start as low as a penny.

What you won’t find is anything exclusive. Every room here is part of the wider Playtech network, so the games, the prize pots and the player counts are shared across other sites running the same platform. The presentation is Vampire’s own. The bingo itself is rented, but you will be pleased to know you are in good company. Playtech powers leading sites like Sun Bingo, Fabulous Bingo and Buzz.
A nice detail is how much you can tweak the play screen. You can change the dabber colour and shape, resize the cards and adjust the font, which is a small thing that regular players will appreciate.
Casino and Slot Games
There’s a lot more here than bingo. Vampire carries a full casino with well over a thousand slots, a jackpot section, card and table games, and live dealer tables. It’s a one-stop ProgressPlay site rather than a bingo specialist.
The slots come from the names you’d expect, including Eyecon, NetEnt, Pragmatic Play, Playtech and Play’n GO. For the bingo crowd, the more relevant draw is the low-stakes table games, and 20p Roulette gets a spot on the homepage for exactly that reason. None of it is unique to the brand, but it’s a deep, well-stocked offering that covers most bases.
Mobile Experience
There’s no app to download. The site runs in a mobile browser instead, adapting to phones and tablets, and it keeps the full feature set intact, from the bingo lobby and cashier to the rewards tracker and live chat.
One quirk carries over from desktop. The casino and the bingo are effectively two front ends, so you need to pick the Bingo tab to land in the right place. Miss it and you’ll find yourself in the casino wondering where the rooms went.
Signup and Login
Getting set up takes a couple of minutes. You pick a username and password, hand over your contact details and date of birth, and accept the terms, with a code sent by text to confirm your number.
Identity checks come into play before you can withdraw. The site may ask to see a passport, driving licence or national ID card, along with a utility bill or card statement dated within the last three months, which is standard practice and rarely an obstacle if your details are accurate.
Deposit Options
The banking list is broad. Debit cards take deposits from £10 up to £5,000 and sit alongside Apple Pay, while e-wallet fans can use PayPal, Skrill, Neteller and Payz, though the e-wallet minimum deposit climbs to £20. Prepaid options cover Paysafecard and Neosurf for anyone who prefers not to link a card.
Mobile billing through PayViaPhone is available for smaller top-ups, but it comes with a 15% processing fee, which is far more than the free card and wallet routes cost. It’s a handy option in a pinch and an expensive one as a habit.
Withdrawals and Fees
Cashing out starts at £5 on a debit card, with e-wallet and other limits varying by method, and money is returned along the same route it came in. ProgressPlay processes requests quickly, usually within a business day, after which the transfer takes anywhere from one to seven working days to show up depending on how you withdraw.
There’s a charge here too. Withdrawals carry a 1% fee capped at £3, so it’s modest in cash terms but still a cost most rivals don’t impose. Paired with the steep mobile-deposit fee, it’s the part of the banking setup that feels least generous.
Licensing and Regulation
Vampire Bingo runs on ProgressPlay’s UK Gambling Commission licence, account number 39335, backed by a Malta Gaming Authority licence for the wider operation. That brings the full set of UK player protections, with segregated funds, identity checks and the standard suite of deposit, loss and session limits available from the responsible-gambling menu.
Support runs around the clock through live chat, which you reach once you’ve logged in, and there’s an email route for anything less urgent. There’s no telephone line, which is the one gap, but the help centre is detailed enough to answer most routine questions on its own. The live chat hosts are quick to respond and keep things friendly, in keeping with the brand.
Sister Sites
Vampire belongs to ProgressPlay’s enormous family of brands, but that family is overwhelmingly casino-led, so true bingo-first relatives are thin on the ground. The closest comparison we’ve reviewed is Queen’s Bingo and Monster Casino, other ProgressPlay sites that give bingo real prominence alongside its slots.
If you step sideways into the rest of the network, you’ll mostly meet casino skins rather than bingo halls, sharing the same back end and banking but built around slots first. For bingo specifically, the choice within the ProgressPlay stable is narrower than the headline domain count suggests.
Review Verdict
Pros
- Strong Playtech bingo with a busy lobby and a packed schedule of big-money rooms
The most committed theme of any UK bingo site, with named vampire hosts and a full gothic look
Sizeable scheduled jackpots, from 50K Fridays to a rotating £300k monthly event
Low-ish 4x wagering on the bingo-only reload bonuses
A decent rewards programme with missions, a points store and leaderboards
One ProgressPlay account also covers the full casino
Cons
- Another ProgressPlay white label, with no bingo rooms exclusive to the site
The 10x wagering and a 1x conversion cap on the welcome offer limit the win potential
Fees on both sides, 1% up to £3 on withdrawals and 15% on PayViaPhone deposits
The vampire theme is laid on thick, and the marketing oversells it
Review Verdict
Vampire Bingo is a well-built site with a sense of fun that most of its rivals lack. The Playtech bingo is solid, the room schedule is full, and the big timed jackpots punch above what you’d expect from a 2026 newcomer. The theme, overdone as it is, gives the place a character all of its own.
The honest read is that the costume is doing a lot of the work. This is another ProgressPlay white label, the rooms are networked rather than exclusive, the welcome offer is only average once you spot the conversion cap, and the small fees on both deposits and withdrawals chip away at the value.
That nets out at 3/5. The Cozy Games relaunch has landed it on a more dependable platform, the reward programme and the low-wager bingo reloads are real positives, and players who enjoy the gothic styling will get a kick out of it. Just go in knowing the bingo you’ll play is the same as on plenty of other sites, dressed up in better clothes.
