Family Feud Questions
Build survey-style prompts with likely answer categories, team-friendly rounds, and host notes for a Family Feud-style game.
Group size: 8 to 80+ players
Example: Name something people forget to bring to a holiday party.
Free tools
Create questions, pick teams, plan activities, and prep games for classrooms, work events, parties, churches, and family game nights.
What you can make
Trivia, survey, classroom, and review prompts.
Puzzle, clue, vocabulary, and party word starters.
Run-of-show ideas for school, work, church, and parties.
Fairer teams, smoother hosting, and clearer game flow.
Create Game Content
Start here if you already know the kind of game you want to play. Create question ideas, word lists, puzzles, price prompts, bingo ideas, and trivia rounds.
Build survey-style prompts with likely answer categories, team-friendly rounds, and host notes for a Family Feud-style game.
Group size: 8 to 80+ players
Example: Name something people forget to bring to a holiday party.
Create phrase and word puzzle ideas for spin-and-solve rounds, vocabulary practice, and mixed-age group play.
Group size: 2 to 30 players
Example: Photosynthesis
Create word lists, categories, and clue-giving guardrails for a Password-style team word game.
Group size: 4 to 40 players
Example: Team communication words for clue-giving rounds.
Create category-based quiz board content with clues, answers, point values, and a final challenge for Quiz Champ.
Group size: 4 to 60 players
Example: Civil War Vocabulary
Create school-subject trivia questions organized by grade level, topic, and difficulty for classroom or family play.
Group size: 2 to 30 players
Example: Which planet is known as the Red Planet?
Create item lists, price prompts, closest-guess scoring rules, and final-round ideas for Right Price games.
Group size: 3 to 50 players
Example: Guess the price of a 168-count pack of diapers.
Create trivia questions by topic, audience, difficulty, round type, and scoring needs.
Group size: 2 to 80 players
Example: Five company-history questions with short answers and a tie-breaker.
Plan and Run Activities
Use these tools to organize teams, choose icebreakers, plan a classroom review, build a party game flow, or create a simple run of show.
Create low-pressure prompts that help people talk without making the room feel awkward.
Group size: 3 to 50 players
Example: Low-pressure prompts for the first five minutes of a team meeting.
Turn a lesson topic into a review plan with warmups, questions, game recommendations, and exit-ticket ideas.
Group size: 8 to 35 students
Example: Start with a vocabulary warmup, run a quiz board, and finish with a two-question exit ticket.
Build a youth-group activity plan with clean icebreakers, Bible trivia, team games, and facilitation notes.
Group size: 6 to 60 students
Example: Start with a low-pressure question, split into teams, and run a short Bible trivia round.
Create a simple party game plan by event type, guest mix, timing, and desired energy level.
Group size: 6 to 60 guests
Example: Open with a quick icebreaker, play one team game, and close with a tie-breaker question.
Sequence games, prompts, transitions, timing, and host notes into a clear activity plan.
Group size: 4 to 100+ participants
Example: A timed plan with an opener, main game, second format, and closing reflection.
Create quick reflection and comprehension prompts that help hosts close a learning activity with useful feedback.
Group size: 1 to 100+ participants
Example: Close a review game with quick checks for confidence and misconception.
Tools by group
Different rooms need different prep. Start with the audience, then choose the game format or activity plan that fits your time, group size, and energy level.
Find review games, exit tickets, vocabulary prompts, and quick activities for students.
Plan team-building games, meeting warmups, training reviews, and group activities.
Get ideas for birthdays, showers, holidays, family gatherings, and casual game nights.
Build approachable activities for youth nights, church events, Bible review, and small groups.
Choose simple games that work for mixed ages, repeat hosts, and low-prep family events.
Coming Soon
These tools are coming soon. For now, use the related games and guides.
Outline multiple-choice questions with increasing difficulty, lifeline-style support, and a final high-stakes prompt.
Group size: 1 to 30 players
Example: Start with basic recall, then move to scenario and application questions.
Create bingo card prompt ideas, call sheets, and participation grids for large or casual group play.
Group size: 6 to 100+ players
Example: Baby shower bingo spaces for gift-opening or guest mingling.
Outline multi-step clue chains, puzzle locks, answer keys, and team instructions for escape-room-style activities.
Group size: 4 to 40 players
Example: Players solve a timeline clue, decode a vocabulary word, then unlock the final answer.
Turn a player list into balanced teams, host notes, and a quick setup plan for live group games.
Group size: 4 to 100+ players
Example: Four teams of six with captains selected before the first round.
Create a sales kickoff run of show with energizers, training review games, team challenges, and follow-up prompts.
Group size: 10 to 150 sellers
Example: Open with product trivia, move into team objection handling, and close with a fast pricing challenge.
Create poll prompts and response options for audience voting, ranking, and lightweight group feedback.
Group size: 5 to 200+ participants
Example: Which game format should we use for the final round?
Create word cloud prompts and facilitation notes for reflection, brainstorming, and event openers.
Group size: 5 to 200+ participants
Example: In one word, what should this group focus on today?
Game Pass
Game Pass gives hosts access to the shared Online Group Games library, including Fortunate Wheel, Quiz Champ, Are You Smarter, PlayPassword, and Right Price.
Family Feud-style game is an owned live game, but it is not part of shared Game Pass yet.