Blooket, a free game-based learning platform used by over 60 million students globally, lets any teacher or student host a live quiz game in under two minutes using a simple game code system.
TL;DR
- Sign into Blooket at blooket.com, then select or create a question set.
- Choose a game mode, set your options, and click "Host Now" to get a code.
- Students join at joinblooket.com using that code β no account required.
- Free accounts can host unlimited games; Gold plans unlock advanced features.
You're 90 seconds away from a classroom going absolutely wild over a math quiz. That's the promise of Blooket β and when you know how to blooket host correctly, it actually delivers.
Whether you're a first-time teacher or a student running a review session, this guide walks you through every step with zero confusion.
What Does It Mean to Blooket Host?
When you blooket host, you launch a live game session that generates a unique 6-digit join code. Students enter that code at joinblooket.com β no login required on their end β and your lobby fills up instantly.
The host controls the game entirely: start time, game mode, question count, and time limits. Students play on their own devices simultaneously, competing in real time.
Definition: A Blooket host is the user who initiates a live game session, controls game settings, and monitors a live dashboard showing each player's progress and score.
What You Need Before You Host
Before you hit that "Host Now" button, make sure you have these ready:
- A free Blooket account β sign up at blooket.com with an email address. [SOURCE: blooket.com/register]
- A question set β either one you created or a public set from the Blooket Discover page.
- A device with internet access β desktop or laptop recommended for the host dashboard.
- A way to share your game code β projector, Google Classroom, or just writing it on a board.
- Student devices β any phone, tablet, or laptop works for joining players.
Pro Tip: Always test your question set before a live session. Open it in preview mode to catch typos or duplicate questions that could kill the game's momentum.
How to Blooket Host: Step-by-Step
Step 1 β Sign Into Your Blooket Account
Go to blooket.com and log in with your Google account or email. If you don't have an account yet, registration takes under 60 seconds. Teachers should use a school email for easier student-facing credibility.
Step 2 β Choose or Create a Question Set
From your dashboard, click "My Sets" to access sets you've built, or hit "Discover" to browse over 500,000 public question sets. [SOURCE: blooket.com/discover]
Search by subject (e.g., "7th grade fractions" or "World War II") and preview any set before hosting it. To create your own, click "Create Set" and add questions in multiple-choice or true/false format.
Pro Tip: Public sets save enormous prep time. Filter by grade level and subject to find sets with high "plays" counts β those are community-vetted and reliable.
Step 3 β Select a Game Mode
Once you've chosen a question set, click "Host". Blooket then shows you its full library of game modes. Each mode uses the same questions but wraps them in a completely different gameplay mechanic.
This is where Blooket separates itself from every other quiz platform. The mode you choose determines energy level, competitiveness, and engagement. See the full breakdown in the section below.
Step 4 β Configure Your Host Settings
Before launching, you'll see a settings panel with these options:
- Question count β how many of the set's questions to include
- Time per question β typically 5β20 seconds
- Randomize questions β shuffle order to prevent cheating
- Randomize answers β shuffle answer choices as well
- Allow late joins β lets students join after the game starts
Adjust these to match your class pace and session length. A 15-minute activity works well with 20 questions at 10-second timers.
Step 5 β Share Your Game Code and Launch
After clicking "Host Now", Blooket generates a 6-digit game code. Share it with students via your projector, LMS, or just call it out. Students enter it at joinblooket.com or blooket.com/play.
Watch your lobby populate in real time. Once everyone's in, click "Start" β and the game begins.
Blooket Game Modes Explained
Choosing the right game mode is the most underrated hosting skill. Here's how the major modes compare:
| Game Mode | Best For | Competitive Level | Recommended Time |
| Gold Quest | General review | Medium | 10β15 min |
| Tower Defense | Longer sessions | High | 20β30 min |
| Racing | Speed-focused review | High | 10β15 min |
| Crypto Hack | Strategic thinkers | Medium | 15β20 min |
| CafΓ© | Younger students | LowβMedium | 10β15 min |
| Factory | Repetition drills | Medium | 10β20 min |
| Fishing Frenzy | Casual play | Low | 10β15 min |
| Blook Rush | Fast-paced review | High | 10β15 min |
[SOURCE: blooket.com/modes]
Real-world insight: According to educators on the Blooket Teachers Facebook community (130,000+ members), Tower Defense consistently drives the highest re-engagement β students ask to replay it more than any other mode.
Blooket Host vs. Student Join: Key Differences
Understanding both sides helps you troubleshoot problems on the fly.
| Feature | Host (Teacher/Creator) | Student (Player) |
| Account required | Yes β free minimum | No account needed |
| Controls game settings | Yes | No |
| Can see live scores | Yes β full dashboard | Limited in-game only |
| Device type | Laptop recommended | Any device |
| Join URL | blooket.com | joinblooket.com |
| Can end game early | Yes | No |
| Can see all questions | Yes (during setup) | Only current question |
Pro Tips for a Smoother Blooket Host Session
These are the details most tutorials skip β and the ones that actually matter in a live classroom.
Before the game:
- Close other browser tabs to avoid lag on your host device.
- Share the code on your LMS (Google Classroom, Canvas) 5 minutes early so late arrivals don't disrupt the start.
- Use a question set with 15β30 questions for a 20-minute class period.
During the game:
- Keep the lobby screen visible on your projector β watching names appear builds excitement.
- If a student's device freezes, they can rejoin using the same code without losing their in-game progress (in most modes).
- Use the host dashboard to monitor which questions have the lowest correct-answer rates β those become your post-game review targets.
After the game:
- Click "Game Report" in your dashboard for a full breakdown of per-student and per-question performance.
- Export results as a CSV if you need grade-book data. [SOURCE: blooket.com/dashboard]
Pro Tip: Assign a Blooket game as homework using the "Assign" feature (Gold plan). Students complete it on their own time and results still appear in your dashboard.
Common Blooket Host Problems β and How to Fix Them
"My game code isn't working for students"
The most common cause is students trying to enter the code at the wrong URL. Direct them specifically to joinblooket.com β not just blooket.com. Also confirm you clicked "Host Now" and not just "Preview."
"Students can't join after the game starts"
Check that you enabled "Allow late joins" in your pre-game settings. If you didn't toggle it before launch, you'll need to end the game and start a new one.
"The game is running too fast / too slow"
Adjust question timer settings before hosting. Gold Quest and Racing modes benefit from shorter timers (8β10 sec). Tower Defense and Crypto Hack work better with longer ones (15β20 sec) due to their complexity.
"I can't find my question set"
Sets you've created appear under "My Sets." If you favorited a public set, check "Favorites." Blooket does not auto-save draft sets β always hit Save before navigating away.
"Audio or visuals aren't loading for students"
Blooket's game animations require stable internet. Weak Wi-Fi causes incomplete asset loads. Recommend students switch to a school Wi-Fi network and refresh their browser tab.
FAQ
What does it mean to blooket host a game? To blooket host means you log into your Blooket account, select a question set, choose a game mode, and launch a live session. This generates a unique join code that students use to enter the game at joinblooket.com β no student account is required to play.
Is blooket hosting free? Yes. Hosting Blooket games is completely free with a standard account. The free tier supports unlimited live games, all core game modes, and up to 60 players per session. Blooket Gold ($3.99/month) adds homework assignments, extra Blooks, and advanced analytics. [SOURCE: blooket.com/gold]
How many students can join a Blooket game? Free accounts support up to 60 players per live session. Blooket Gold increases this to unlimited players, making it viable for large school-wide events or district-level competitions.
Can students play Blooket without an account? Yes. Students only need the 6-digit game code to join a live session. They enter a nickname at joinblooket.com and they're in the game immediately β no sign-up, no email, no download required.
How long does a Blooket hosted game last? Most teachers run games for 10β20 minutes. Game length depends on question count and the time-per-question setting you choose. There is no hard time limit β the host can end the game manually at any point from the host dashboard.
Can I host a Blooket game on my phone? You can, but it's not ideal. The host dashboard is optimized for desktop or laptop browsers. On mobile, some dashboard features are harder to navigate. Students, however, play perfectly well on phones.
What happens if I lose internet connection while hosting? If the host loses connection, the game pauses for all players. Students see a waiting screen. When you reconnect and reload the session, in most game modes you can resume from where the game left off.
Your Next Step as a Blooket Host
Hosting your first Blooket game takes less time to set up than writing a worksheet β and the engagement payoff is dramatically higher. Start with Gold Quest for your first session: it's forgiving, fast-paced, and wildly popular with students across grade levels.
Once you're comfortable with the basics, explore Tower Defense for longer review sessions and dig into your Game Reports to turn fun into formative data.
Research for this article drew on Blooket's official documentation, educator community discussions, and hands-on testing of the platform's hosting workflow across multiple game modes.
