Built for individual teachers

Create classroom quiz games once. Share them or host them live.

Upload lesson material for an AI-generated draft or build the quiz yourself. Then send students a link for independent play or host a multiplayer game on the classroom screen.

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Create the quiz onceShare for solo playHost multiplayer live

How it works in practice

Create the question set once. Choose how students play.

The quiz is the reusable layer. You decide whether students work through it independently or play together live.

01

Upload material or build a quiz

Let AI draft questions from lesson notes, worksheets, slides, or readings—or create the quiz manually from scratch.

02

Review the questions

Check the generated set, remove anything outside the lesson goal, and edit the wording before students see it.

03

Choose the delivery

Two ways to use the same quiz

Independent play

Generate a share link

Send the link to your class. Students open the question set without signing in, choose a single-player game, and play on their own device—in class or at home.

Live classroom play

Host multiplayer on the big screen

Choose a multiplayer format and put the host view on a projector or shared screen. Students join with a room code or play in pairs, depending on the game.

Every multiplayer game has a classroom job

Match the social structure to the lesson

Use whole-class games for shared energy, small-group games for deeper competition, and pair games for stations or quick practice.

Whole-class cooperation

Boss Raid

Up to 60 students answer at their own pace while every correct answer helps the class defeat one shared boss.

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Full-class competition

Horse Race

Turn review into a live race where correct answers move each student’s horse toward the finish line.

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Elimination tournament

Knowledge Royale

Run real-time quiz rounds with battle-royale elimination when the class wants a higher-stakes tournament.

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Small-group strategy

Vault Heist

Correct answers crack safes while shields, multipliers, and heist cards give a small group tactical choices.

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Team quiz board

Study Jeopardy

Let players choose categories and values from a shared board, with bigger questions carrying bigger rewards.

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Pair strategy

Connect 4

Two students share a device, answer to place their chips, and balance subject recall with four-in-a-row strategy.

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Quick 1v1 review

Tic Tac Toe

A short head-to-head study duel that works as pass-and-play or an online match through a shareable link.

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Longer 1v1 duel

Battleships

Students answer to load their cannons, call shots on a hidden grid, and try to sink the other fleet first.

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Compare all classroom formats in detail

Start from your curriculum

Generate a first draft from lesson material, then review every question before using it with students.

Choose the social structure

Bring everyone into one shared event, divide the class into smaller rooms, or rotate pairs through quick strategy games.

Reuse the question set

Change the game format without rebuilding the lesson, so the learning goal stays consistent across the room.

Choose the right starting point

One teacher can start today. A whole school gets its own workspace.

For an individual teacher

Create and host with your own account

  • Free plan available
  • Upload and review your material
  • Use solo and classroom game formats
  • Upgrade only when you need larger limits

For a school or organization

Manage teachers, learners, access, and reporting

  • Branded organization workspace
  • Admin, teacher, manager, and learner roles
  • Central controls and organization reporting
  • Self-serve purchase or supported rollout
Explore Enterprise

Plan your first classroom session

Compare all eight classroom formats, use the practical Boss Raid guide for a whole-class example, or see how the workflow differs from Kahoot.

Questions teachers ask first

Is StudyQuest free for individual teachers?+

Yes. You can create a normal StudyQuest account and start with the free plan. Premium remains optional for larger limits and additional features.

Do my students need accounts?+

Several multiplayer games use a simple room code or same-device play. Boss Raid lets students join from a browser with a short code and nickname, without creating student accounts. Each game page explains its exact setup.

Can I use my own lesson material?+

Yes. Upload PDFs, DOCX files, images of slides, or pasted text. StudyQuest generates a first question set that you can review and edit before using it.

Can students play the quiz independently?+

Yes. Generate a share link and send it to the class. Students can open the question set without signing in, choose a single-player game, and play on their own device in class or at home.

Can I see what the class struggled with?+

Reporting depends on the format. Boss Raid, for example, ends with a host report showing the questions the class missed most and a private player summary, giving you a practical starting point for reteaching.

When should my school use Enterprise?+

Use Enterprise when you need a managed school workspace, staff and learner roles, centralized administration, access controls, organization reporting, branded access, or rollout support.

Make the next review session playable

Start with the free plan, use material you already have, and try one classroom game before changing anything about your teaching workflow.