Rona Nesser is a trailblazer for Minnesota's newest attempt to fund the Vikings stadium — electronic linked bingo.
Starting this week, Minnesota will be the first state to launch statewide electronic bingo systems allowing players at dozens of locations to compete for some serious jackpots.
Nesser was part of a recent test run of the game at the Blainbrook Bowl, where she propped the bingo player on her table, pressed the video screen to call up a game and played against a friend at another table.
"I think this could really take off," predicted Nesser, fiddling with the video game's features. "You just need more sites and more people playing."
That's supposed to happen in the weeks ahead, as a St. Paul-based company called E-tab Manufacturing clicks the "on" switch for gaming devices in 90 bars and restaurants.
If all goes as planned, Nesser should be able to connect with players across Minnesota, vying for $1,000-plus jackpots and potentially attracting a new wave of gamblers.
That's what charitable gaming officials, lawmakers and the Vikings are counting on. Proceeds from new electronic gaming devices are supposed to drive Minnesota's $348 million share of the Vikings stadium, but the first games — electronic pulltabs — have so far been a bust. Slow sales forced the state to slash its forecast for what those games would raise by the end of this year from $35 million to $1.7 million.
Minnesotans already drop $62 million a year on paper bingo, but that's only about 6 percent of state charitable gambling revenues. Paper pulltabs make up most of the rest.