Yes — official Bingo Blitz free credits are completely legit. Playtika, the studio behind the game, posts real reward links to Bingo Blitz's own social channels every single day, and they credit your Gift Center for free. The problem is the swarm of copycat "free credit generator" and "human verification" sites that ride on those searches. Those are scams. This page shows you exactly how to tell the two apart.
The short answer
Legit: the daily reward links from Bingo Blitz's official channels and the free in-game sources (Power Packs, the Rewards Wheel, friend gifts, events). Not legit: anything calling itself a generator, hack, mod, or "unlimited credits", and any site that asks you to "verify you're human," complete offers, or enter your account details. If a source is free, official, and never asks for anything, it's real. If it asks you to jump through hoops or hand over information, it's a scam.
What's genuinely legit
Everything on our how to get free credits guide is official and safe:
- Daily reward links — posted by Playtika to Bingo Blitz's Facebook, Instagram, X (@BingoBlitz) and Discord. We aggregate the verified ones on our daily links page.
- Free Power Pack every 2 hours from the in-game store.
- Doug's Rewards Wheel — a free daily spin.
- Friend gifts — a free daily allowance from each friend.
- Events, tournaments and collections — free credit payouts for playing.
None of these ever asks for your password or payment. That's the mark of the real thing.
The scams to avoid
Steer clear of anything that:
- Calls itself a "free credits generator," "hack," "mod," or "unlimited credits." No such tool exists — the game's credits live on Playtika's servers and can't be conjured by a website.
- Makes you "complete a survey," "verify you're human," or "download an app" before you get anything. That's how these sites earn money off you while delivering nothing.
- Asks for your Bingo Blitz login, Facebook password, or personal details. Handing those over can get your account stolen.
- Promises a specific giant number ("50,000 free credits!"). Real links vary by player and are never advertised as fixed jackpots.
For a full breakdown of the "no human verification" myth specifically, see the truth about Bingo Blitz free credits without human verification.
How to verify a link in two seconds
Before you tap, check where it goes. A genuine Bingo Blitz link opens on the playtika.com domain and takes you straight into the game's Gift Center. If you hover or long-press and the destination is some other site — a "rewards" page, a link shortener you don't recognize, or anything that loads a web form — don't tap it. Real links open the app; fake links open a browser page that wants something from you.
If you already used a shady site
If you entered your login on a "generator," change your password immediately (and your Facebook password if you use Facebook login), and enable two-factor authentication. If you only clicked and closed it without entering anything, you're almost certainly fine — just avoid it going forward. Then get your credits the safe way: start with today's official daily links and the free in-game sources. They're faster than any scam anyway.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Bingo Blitz free credits legit?
The official ones are, yes. Playtika posts real free credits links to Bingo Blitz's own social channels every day, and they credit your Gift Center for free. What isn't legit is any third-party "generator," "hack" or "human verification" site — those are scams.
How do I know a Bingo Blitz link is real?
A genuine link opens on the playtika.com domain and takes you straight into the game's Gift Center. It never asks for your password, payment, or personal details, and never makes you complete offers or "verify you're human." If any of that happens, it's fake.
Can I get banned for using free credit links?
Not for the official daily links — those are meant to be shared and used. You can, however, put your account at risk by handing your login to a "generator" or third-party site, which is exactly what those scams are after.
Why do so many scam sites exist for this?
Because "free credits" is a hugely popular search, and scam sites monetize the traffic through surveys, ads and stolen accounts. The demand is real; the shortcuts they sell are not. Stick to official links.