Survey says… this one gets loud.
Family Feud brings the classic game show format into your classroom. A prompt goes up on screen, and teams compete to guess the top answers on the board. The teacher runs everything — type in what students guess and the board auto-matches it, or click answers directly to reveal them. Fuzzy matching means you don’t need to type an exact match; close enough counts.
Set up 2–4 teams before the game starts. Scores track automatically and the active team rotates each round. Wrong guesses trigger strikes with a full-screen X for maximum drama. Three strikes and it’s steal time — an inline banner lets you award the round’s points to whichever team gets the steal, or send them back to the original team if nobody nails it.
The CSV is three columns: prompt, answer, and points. Each prompt repeats for however many answers that round has (typically 5–8), ranked by point value. Add as many rounds as you want — there’s no cap. The game just plays through every unique prompt in the file.
Works best projected with the teacher at the keyboard. Pick your teams, upload your CSV, and let the chaos begin.
Educator, writer, and edtech thinker.
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