Bingoplus Strategies: How to Maximize Your Gaming Experience and Rewards
As I settled into my first few hours with Bingoplus, I immediately noticed something fascinating about its design philosophy. You can absolutely play the entire game solo—the developers made sure of that—but joining other players in co-op feels so incredibly seamless that it almost becomes the default experience, especially when you hit those brutal later missions. I remember struggling through mission 17 alone for about three hours before finally caving and matchmaking with two random players. We cleared it in under twenty minutes on our first attempt. That moment crystallized for me what makes Bingoplus both brilliant and frustrating: cooperation makes things easier, but it doesn't fundamentally transform how you play in the way I'd hoped it would.
The combat system illustrates this paradox perfectly. Take Ajax, the tank-style character I mained during my first playthrough. His ability to deploy a protective domed shield provides fantastic cover for everyone in the immediate vicinity. I can't count how many times that shield saved our squad from complete wipeouts during extraction sequences. But here's the thing—after dozens of hours playing both solo and co-op, I struggled to identify another clear example where character abilities meaningfully interact. This feels like a missed opportunity of monumental proportions. Consider Valby, who can liquefy herself and leave damaging water trails. During one particularly intense firefight in the Hydra Basin, I watched a Valby player create these beautiful water patterns while Bunny—a character specializing in electrical attacks—stood right beside her. I held my breath, waiting for that magical moment where electricity would course through the water, creating a devastating area-of-effect combo. It never happened. The potential for emergent, synergistic gameplay is right there, practically begging to be utilized, yet the mechanics don't support it.
From a rewards perspective, this design choice has tangible consequences. Playing co-op definitely increases your survival rate—my extraction success jumped from around 45% solo to nearly 80% in a full squad—but it doesn't significantly boost your resource acquisition or experience gains. The game could have implemented special combo bonuses or teamwork multipliers that reward coordinated play with bonus currency, exclusive cosmetics, or accelerated progression. Instead, the reward structure remains essentially identical regardless of how you play. This creates what I call the "co-op convenience trap"—players team up because it's practical, not because the game incentivizes creative collaboration. I found myself sticking with the same straightforward strategies whether playing alone or with others, which after 60+ hours began to feel repetitive.
The economic implications extend beyond mere gameplay. Bingoplus features an extensive in-game store with weapon skins, character outfits, and emotes, yet none of these items reflect cooperative achievements. Where are the cosmetics that only unlock when you perform 100 successful ability combinations with another player? What about weapon charms that track your teamwork statistics? These missed monetization opportunities surprise me, especially when you consider that games with strong cooperative elements typically see 25-30% higher engagement with cosmetic marketplaces. The current system leaves money on the table while failing to encourage the type of social gameplay that keeps communities active long-term.
Here's what I've discovered through experimentation: the most rewarding approach to Bingoplus involves treating co-op as a practical tool rather than a transformative experience. I now use matchmaking specifically for farming particularly challenging missions—my squad and I can clear the "Fallen Titan" boss fight in about 12 minutes together, compared to my 25-minute solo attempts. But for exploration, daily challenges, and simply enjoying the combat mechanics at my own pace, I prefer playing alone. This hybrid strategy has maximized both my enjoyment and resource accumulation, giving me the best of both worlds without expecting the game to deliver cooperative depth it simply doesn't contain.
Looking at the broader gaming landscape, Bingoplus sits in an interesting middle ground. It's neither fully committed to solo play like traditional single-player RPGs, nor does it embrace the deep interdependence of games like Deep Rock Galactic or Monster Hunter World, where character roles complement each other in essential ways. This middle position might actually be intentional—accessible enough for lone wolves while providing basic cooperative functionality. But for players like me who crave those magical moments of emergent teamwork, it can't help but feel like we're experiencing 70% of what could have been a truly revolutionary system.
My advice? Enjoy Bingoplus for what it does well—smooth combat, engaging progression, and stunning environments—while recognizing its limitations regarding true cooperative play. The rewards come from mastering individual characters rather than exploring team dynamics. Hopefully future updates or a sequel will expand on the foundation that's already here, because the potential for something truly special is undeniable. Until then, I'll continue to appreciate the game's strengths while quietly dreaming about what might have been if Valby's water could actually conduct Bunny's electricity.

