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BingoWeb.com

Bingo!!!  Bingo.com sold for $1.1M in 1999, later, after development, Unibet then bought it for $8M.  BingoWeb.com is a very strong and valuable domain! Since is short, clean, brandable, and has the bonus of being registered back in June 1997 (making it a true aged domain),

As of now, 38 U.S. states have legalized casino and /or sports betting in some form.

Here are some directions you might consider:


1. Online Gaming / Bingo Platform

  • Bingo Website: Build an online bingo community, with either free games, pay-to-play, or social bingo tournaments.

  • Affiliate Portal: Partner with existing online bingo or casino operators and run it as an affiliate site, collecting commissions from referrals.

  • Bingo Software Hub: Provide software solutions, tools, or bingo card generators for events, schools, or organizations.


2. Community & Entertainment

  • Forum or Community Site: A niche forum for bingo players, fans of number games, or even broader casual gaming.

  • Content Site: Bingo strategies, tips, guides, event listings, and reviews of online bingo platforms.

  • Streaming / Event Hub: A space where bingo events (charity, live-streamed games, etc.) can be promoted.


3. Tech or Web Services Angle

Since the name contains “Web,” you could creatively pivot it beyond bingo:

  • Marketing Agency: “Bingo!” conveys hitting the target or winning—great for a digital marketing agency.

  • Startup Brand: Position as a catchy SaaS, AI tool, or creative app brand with a fun, memorable name.

  • Web Directory or Search Tool: A playful directory of websites or apps.


4. Domain Investment & Resale

  • Being from 1997, it’s an aged, premium, one-word domain. You could:

    • List it on premium marketplaces (Sedo, Afternic, BrandBucket).

    • Reach out directly to bingo operators, gambling companies, or entertainment startups.

    • Leverage its age for SEO value, since older domains often get trust advantages.


5. Hybrid Models

  • Bingo + Web Tools: Online bingo games alongside bingo-themed web utilities (e.g., “spin-to-win” gamification for marketing).

  • E-commerce: Sell bingo-related products—cards, chips, merchandise, or even novelty apparel.

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What comparable sales suggest

Some domain sales and data points relevant to “bingo”, aged domains, or short, strong .com names:

  1. Bingo.com

    • One of the most famous “bingo” domains. It originally sold for US$1,100,000 in April 1999.

    • Later, the domain + real‐money business associated with it was acquired by Unibet for about US$8 million minus other offsets.

  2. Other recent gambling / bingo‐adjacent domain sales

    • “CasinoBonus.com” sold for $199,000.

    • Domains with “bingo” or similar in them (though often longer, multi-word, or less “premium”) tend to sell in the low thousands, often $2,000-$20,000, depending heavily on brandability, length, and existing traffic/SEO.

  3. Factors that lift domain value
    These are widely accepted in domain-valuation literature:

    • Age + clean history: Domains registered long ago, with no spam, no penalties, good uptime, some history of use, are viewed favorably.

    • Brandability: How easy it is to remember, pronounce, spell; is it catchy; does it suggest something useful.

    • Keywords: If the domain has relevant keywords for a high-demand field. “Bingo” clearly is one.

    • Extension: .com is still by far the strongest TLD in terms of general market demand.

    • Length & simplicity: Shorter is better; no hyphens, no weird spellings; fewer syllables/tokens.

    • Backlink & SEO profile: Having good, clean backlinks, decent domain authority, little or no bad history (spam, penalty, abuse) adds real value.

    • Traffic / Existing use: If there is residual traffic, or brand recognition, that helps. Even parked traffic or spillover from prior use can bump the value.


How BingoWeb.com stacks up (just qualitatively)

Let me assess BingoWeb.com in light of those factors:

  • Age: Registered in June 1997 → very old. That’s a plus.

  • Keyword strength: “Bingo” is a strong keyword in gaming/gambling; “Web” is generic but suggests online presence. Together “BingoWeb” clearly suggests a Web‐bingo or bingo + online content / community.

  • Brandability: Good — “BingoWeb” is easy to remember and spell. Not too long. Fortunately no hyphens or odd characters.

  • Extension: .com — excellent.

  • History / Cleanliness: Would need to check whether there are any spam/myriad redirects or Google penalties, whether backlink profile is good. If clean, that’s a strong plus. If it’s been neglected or abused, that could reduce value.

  • Comparable vs “Bingo.com”: Bingo.com is much more valuable because it’s an exact single keyword (“bingo”) with huge demand and recognition. BingoWeb is less “perfect” but still strong.


Estimate / Sale Price Range

Putting this all together, here’s a realistic sense of what you might expect if you try to sell BingoWeb.com in today’s market to a buyer who appreciates its age, brandability, etc.:

Scenario Low end Medium High end (if everything is excellent)
Buyer = small business / affiliate / startup US$5,000 – US$15,000 US$15,000 – US$40,000 US$40,000 – US$75,000+
Buyer = major gambling operator or well-funded firm seeing branding & traffic value US$20,000 – US$50,000 US$50,000 – US$100,000 US$100,000 – US$250,000+ (if domain has strong traffic / backlinks / existing business)
  • If the domain has a clean SEO history, some existing traffic, recognized brand potential, you might be able to push toward US$50-100K or more, though Bingo.com is in a class above.

DTV.com

June 8, 1997

Premium domain name.

What Drives the Price.

Several key factors that matter (and would for DTV.com):

  1. Memorability / Acronym Value
    “DTV” is already a known acronym (“Digital TV”) so it’s more valuable than random letters.

  2. Brandability
    It’s short, clean, easy to pronounce, type, remember.

  3. History / Age
    Registered since 1997 helps with credibility, possibly some SEO age, maybe backlinks, which can add value.

  4. Market & Demand
    How many companies want “DTV” as a brand/acronym? Probably many in media/tech. Also international interest (non-English speaking companies sometimes value short acronyms highly).

  5. Comparable Letter Quality
    Letters used matters: vowels vs consonants, certain letters are more “premium” in different markets, etc.

  6. Negotiation & Use Case
    If you have a buyer who can make good use of it (e.g. a streaming company, a TV brand, etc.), they may pay more.


Estimated Value Range for DTV.com

Based on the above and comparing to recent similar domain sales:

  • Low end (if buyer interest is modest, or letters seen as “just generic / less premium”): USD $100,000 – $300,000

  • Mid range (good demand, good pitch / use case): USD $300,000 – $800,000

  • High end (strong brand interest, international buyer, strategic use, maybe tied to a big company): USD $800,000 – $2,000,000+

It would be unusual for a 3-letter .com of decent acronym recognition like DTV to sell for very low amounts.