![]() ![]() The best way to keep your opponents from playing a bingo, therefore, is to scoop up all the ends for yourself. It’s much easier to lay seven tiles across the end of the word with a convenient S tile than it is to incorporate already-played letters into your bingo word, forcing you to find room for all those tiles on a crowded board. Most seven-letter or longer plays rely on suffixes or plurals. ![]() Let the game play out until you can lay down all seven letters and get that sweet 50 points. When you see the makings of a big word, be patient. ![]() That’s just long enough to scoop up any worthwhile bonuses, and short enough to deny scoring opportunities to your opponents. If you can’t play a bingo, don’t play big at all. The first tip isn’t just a tip it’s a whole playing strategy. But, short of expanding your vocabulary, which sounds suspiciously like work, how can you make that work for you? Play Big, Go Home Serious Scrabble players are always looking for that 50-point bingo bump. If you play all seven tiles from your rack in a single turn, it's called a “bingo.” And, it gives you 50 bonus points. ![]()
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