by Jeff Snyder

25 questions
One question set, multiple game modes. Tap any game to see it in action. Not sure which to pick?
Two teams place stones on a Go-style board by answering correctly. Capture territory to win.
2 teams, up to 40 students
The class is trapped in a biolab. Answer questions to restore power and crack the passcode to escape before zombies break in.
Whole class, up to 40 students

The whole class works together to blast through walls and defeat monsters. Correct answers deal damage to the current obstacle.
Whole class, up to 40 students
Two teams pull a rope. Each round, the team with more correct answers tugs the rope their way. Pull the other team into the mud to win.
2 teams, up to 40 students
Answer a question, then swat bugs on screen for bonus points. Combines quiz review with an action mini-game.
Up to 40 students
Students race through questions at their own speed. Streak bonuses reward consecutive correct answers. Power-ups add chaos.
Up to 40 students
Teacher-paced. Each question appears on every screen at once. Speed bonuses for fast answers. Live leaderboard on the projected screen.
Up to 40 students
Where was the narrator born?
Why was the narrator’s family considered wealthy?
What happened to the narrator’s village?
What did the narrator do when the attack happened?
Who did the narrator meet after leaving his village?
Why were so many boys alone?
How did the boys organize themselves?
What role was the narrator given?
Where did the boys decide to go?
Why did they travel at night?
Who did the narrator take care of?
What was one major problem during the journey?
What did the boys sometimes eat to survive?
How did the narrator comfort Chuti?
What did the boys find when they reached Ethiopia?
Who helped the boys in the camp?
What did the boys receive in the camp?
Why did the boys not want to go to school at first?
What changed the narrator’s mind about school?
What helped the boys stay hopeful?
Why did the boys have to leave Ethiopia?
What danger did the boys face at the river?
What did the narrator refuse to leave behind?
Where did the boys eventually go after Ethiopia?
What lesson does the story mainly teach?
