
Same with personnel: You will see doctors or nurses, no matter if they are in the room or not, so you have to click them with your mouse to find out if they are still doing their job or having a break or sleeping at home. Third, the game has almost no animations, and the pictures do not change with different equipment, so the only way to find out if a certain device is in a room is to check the equipment menu. And even when you eventually have your clinic doing fine, one wrong decision can push you into bankruptcy (as happened to me when I bought an ambulance car too early after about 40 hours of playing). With running cost for personnel and rent, the need to buy equipment and patients who come into to your clinic rather randomly, it took me one (real life) week to survive two (in game) day for my first game. You have to have an at least a balanced bank account at the end of each day. Second, in Biing! it is hard to survive even a single day (not to mention to win the game). Not exactly a strategic or business decision ) When you play it first, you (especially as a male player) can while away the time by clicking all nurses to undress them. The first, and most important, difference is that Biing! is definitely a game for adults only, even by liberal European standards.


Similar to Bullfrog's better-known Theme Hospital, Biing! is a humorous German-only business simulation about running a hospital and making money by treating patients from more or less weird illnesses and injuries. The game contains typical management simulation elements, albeit with a humorous twist: the doctors are idiots who don't really care for their patients, and the nurses have huge breasts and even do a little striptease from time to time.

You must build a hospital, starting from buying a building for it, then hiring doctors, nurses and receptionists. Biing!: Sex, Intrigue and Scalpels is an erotic hospital-management simulation.
