Type your topic
"The water cycle, Year 5" is all the Arcade needs — it fills your Multiple Choice with real content in seconds.
Answer questions against the clock.
The quick pulse-check without the game-show production. Five questions on the projector tells you in three minutes whether the lesson landed.
Also known as: mcq · multiple choice quiz
"The water cycle, Year 5" is all the Arcade needs — it fills your Multiple Choice with real content in seconds.
Skim, edit or reroll anything before the class sees it. You stay the teacher; the AI stays the intern.
Run it big on the board, or let students join from their own devices with a code and a name.
That's the goal — no rules to teach. Here's how a round of Multiple Choice runs.
Every Arcade game starts from the same box: type what you're teaching and the content writes itself — questions, words, clues — ready for the board at the front of the room.
Game types in the Arcade — one topic box fills them all
From typing a topic to pressing play
Student accounts — a code and a first name is the whole login
Steps every time: type it, check it, play it
I typed 'the water cycle' and had a class quiz in ten seconds flat. It's the first tool my whole department adopted.
Quiz is the live game show; Multiple Choice is its calmer sibling — the same questions against the clock, with less adrenaline. Good for checks, not spectacles.
No. Run it whole-class on the projector, or have students answer from their own devices with a join code when you want individual responses.
Yes. Topic plus grade level in, a full question set out in under a minute — or write your own and reuse them all term.
Yes. Multiple Choice is included on the free tier with every other game type.
Never. Students join with a code and a name — no emails, no passwords. Teachers don't need an account to try it either.
Same three steps, different game. Type a topic and pick your shape.
Type it in, check the content, press play. The Arcade does the rest.