The Complete Blooket Dashboard Guide: Features, Tips & Setup (2026)

Blooket Dashboard

Introduction: Why the Blooket Dashboard Matters

If you just landed on Blooket for the first time, the dashboard looks like a lot. Multiple tabs, numbers, a “Market,” and something called a Blook. It is not obvious what any of it does at first glance.

Here is the reality — once you understand each section, the dashboard becomes one of the fastest tools available for running an engaging class or study session. Teachers are replacing 30-minute review sessions with 10-minute Blooket games and seeing better retention. Students who dislike studying will voluntarily replay sets just to unlock a rare character.

This guide covers every section of the Blooket dashboard — what it is, how it works, common mistakes, and what actually makes a difference in the classroom.

What Is the Blooket Dashboard?

The Blooket dashboard is the main control hub where teachers create question sets, host live games, assign homework, and track student performance. Students use it to manage game history, Blooks, tokens, and assignments.

What you can do from the dashboard:

  • Create and manage question sets from scratch or from the 20M+ Discover library
  • Host live games with real-time controls and live scores
  • Assign homework with custom deadlines
  • Track performance — per-question accuracy, class-wide reports, individual progress
  • Earn and spend tokens to unlock collectible Blooks
  • Access full analytics after every session

The Teacher Dashboard — Every Section Explained

When a teacher logs in, here is exactly what they see and what each section does.

Play

This button at the top is for joining a live game using a Game ID. Students use this most. Teachers press it when they want to test how a game feels from the student side before hosting.

Discover

This is Blooket’s public library. There are more than 20 million question sets available in the Discover section. You can search by keyword, subject, or grade level. Each set can be previewed before use. If you find one you like, you clone it to your own library and edit it however you want. Searching a specific topic like “7th grade photosynthesis” returns usable results in seconds.

Create

This is where you build question sets from scratch. You can add multiple-choice questions, true/false, text entry, or image-based questions. You can also import questions via CSV if your content already exists in a spreadsheet. A 20-question set takes roughly 8 to 10 minutes to build the first time.

My Sets

Your personal library. Every set you create or clone from Discover lives here. From this section you can save, edit, share, assign as homework, play in solo mode, or host a set live. You can also generate a Solo Link — a direct URL introduced in 2026 that drops students straight into a self-paced game without needing a Game ID.

History

A log of every session you have hosted. Click any entry and you see full results — question-by-question accuracy, time per question, individual student scores, and class-wide averages. This breakdown tells you which questions were hardest, who answered what correctly, and how long everything took — taking the guesswork out of planning your next lesson.

Classes

You can create named class groups and add students to them. This lets you track performance across multiple sessions over time rather than viewing each game in isolation. Useful for teachers who use Blooket consistently throughout a semester.

Homework

The assignment hub. You pick a question set, choose a game mode, set a deadline, and share the link. Students complete it at their own pace. The free plan limits homework deadlines to 14 days, while Blooket Plus extends that to 365 days.

Settings

Account preferences, email, password, subscription management, and accessibility options including large text, high contrast mode, and read-aloud functionality.

The Student Dashboard — What Is Different

Students see a simpler and more focused version of the dashboard. The top priority is getting into a game fast.

Play Button

A prominent button at the top for entering a teacher’s Game ID. This is the first thing a student uses when they walk into class and see a code on the projector.

Homework Tab

Any assignments posted by the teacher appear here with deadlines clearly listed. Students click the assignment and start playing — no extra steps.

Stats

Students can view their earned coins, unlocked Blooks, and recent game sessions, making learning feel similar to a gaming experience. This section shows progress in a personal way rather than a clinical report card format.

Market

Where students spend tokens to buy Blook packs. Each pack costs 20 to 25 tokens and contains one Blook based on drop-rate odds. As of 2026, there are over 330 Blooks available across different rarity levels. Students go out of their way to collect rare ones, which keeps them coming back to play more.

How to Use the Blooket Dashboard Step by Step

Here is the exact workflow for a teacher starting a new unit.

Step 1 — Find or Build Your Question Set

Go to Discover first. Search your topic. If you find a set with solid reviews and 20 or more questions, clone it to My Sets and review it. If nothing fits your needs, go to Create and build from scratch. Name every set clearly from day one — something like “Unit 4 Cell Division — 25Q — 7th Grade” will save serious time later when you have 40 sets saved.

Step 2 — Pick Your Game Mode

This is where Blooket separates itself from other quiz tools. The same question set plays completely differently depending on the mode you choose. As of 2026, the platform offers 25 or more game modes, with 18 accessible for free and 9 exclusive to Blooket Plus subscribers.

Popular free modes:

  • Gold Quest — Students answer questions and steal gold from each other. High energy, high engagement.
  • Tower Defense — Correct answers build defenses against waves of enemies. Strategy-focused students love this.
  • Cafe — Students serve customers by answering correctly. Works well with younger grades.
  • Racing — Speed-based answering with a clear winner at the end. Good for review sessions.

Rotating modes across the week keeps engagement high even when reviewing the same content.

Step 3 — Host Live or Assign as Homework

For a live session, click Host on any set in My Sets, share the 6-digit Game ID on your projector, and students join at play.blooket.com. You control when the game starts and can monitor real-time scores from your screen.

For homework, teachers can generate a shareable direct link to a specific question set configured for solo mode. Students click and immediately start self-paced practice — no game code, no menu navigation. You can distribute this link through Google Classroom, Canvas, email, or a QR code.

Step 4 — Check Your Analytics

After any session ends, go to History and open the results. Spend two minutes looking at per-question accuracy before you close the tab. The questions that tripped up 60 percent or more of your class are your reteaching targets. This habit alone makes Blooket more valuable than any other quiz tool in the room.

The Token and Blook System Explained

This is the part of the dashboard that drives student motivation more than anything else.

How Tokens Work

Tokens are Blooket’s in-game currency. Students earn them by playing games, completing homework, and spinning the daily wheel. Once enough tokens are earned, students can use them in the Market to unlock Blooks. Tokens cannot be bought with real money — they are earned only through playing.

What Are Blooks

Blooks are the character avatars that students use in their games. They do not affect scores or outcomes in any way. They are purely cosmetic. But students go to great lengths to collect rare ones. The rarity system mirrors collectible game mechanics — common Blooks drop frequently, legendary ones almost never. This creates a motivation loop that has nothing to do with grades and everything to do with personal investment.

In my observation, students who would never voluntarily review content will replay a question set three or four times in a single evening just to earn enough tokens for another pack.

Why This Matters for Teachers

The Blook system does the motivational heavy lifting for you. You do not need to create external incentives for students to engage with review content. The platform’s internal reward loop handles it. Your job is to make sure the question sets are accurate and aligned to what students actually need to know.

Blooket Free vs Blooket Plus — What the Dashboard Gives You

Most teachers can run an effective Blooket classroom on the free plan. Here is exactly what each tier gives you.

Free Plan Features

  • Unlimited question sets created and stored
  • Access to the full 20M+ Discover library
  • 18 game modes
  • Live games with up to 60 players
  • Homework assignments with 14-day deadlines
  • Basic post-game analytics
  • Solo Links for self-paced practice

Blooket Plus Features

Blooket Plus includes a Question Bank feature for quickly adding questions from other sets, audio questions with the option to record or upload sound-based prompts, extended homework deadlines of up to 365 days, accessibility tools including large text, high contrast mode, and read-aloud functionality, and extra tools such as copying, duplicating, and merging sets.

Plus also raises the live player limit from 60 to 300 — useful for school assemblies or multi-class events.

Blooket Plus is available for $4.99 per month, which is still below Kahoot’s equivalent tier and significantly below Gimkit Pro at $9.99 per month.

For a teacher using Blooket multiple times per week, the upgrade pays for itself in time saved on analytics and content management. For occasional use, the free plan is genuinely sufficient.

Common Mistakes New Users Make on the Blooket Dashboard

Mistake 1 — Ignoring the History Tab

Most new teachers host a game, see students enjoying it, and move on. The History tab is where the actual teaching value lives. Skipping it means you are running Blooket as entertainment, not as a learning tool. Check it after every session.

Mistake 2 — Using the Same Game Mode Every Time

Picking one mode and sticking with it kills novelty fast. Students disengage when they know exactly what to expect. Rotate modes every session using the same question set. The questions stay consistent, but the experience feels new each time.

Mistake 3 — Building Sets With Too Few Questions

A 10-question set runs out fast, especially in modes like Gold Quest where students play in multiple rounds. Build sets with at least 20 questions. 30 or more is better for longer sessions or homework assignments.

Mistake 4 — Not Naming Sets Clearly

Vague names like “Review Game” or “Quiz 3” become impossible to sort through once you have 30 or 40 sets saved. Use a naming format that includes the topic, question count, and grade level from day one.

Mistake 5 — Skipping the Discover Tab Entirely

Many teachers go straight to Create and build everything themselves. The Discover library has 20 million sets. Someone has almost certainly already built a solid set on your topic. Start there, clone what works, edit what does not, and save yourself significant prep time.

Blooket Dashboard vs Competitors — How It Compares

Blooket vs Kahoot

Blooket offers 25 or more distinct game modes versus Kahoot’s one or two formats. The Blooks collection system adds long-term progression that Kahoot lacks. The free tier supports 60 players versus Kahoot’s 50. Kahoot is stronger for very simple, fast deployment. Blooket is stronger for sustained engagement across multiple sessions.

Blooket vs Gimkit

Both platforms use game mechanics to drive learning. Gimkit has strong in-game economy features but costs significantly more at $9.99 per month for the Pro tier. Blooket’s free tier is more generous, and the Blook collection system creates stronger repeat-play motivation for most student age groups.

Blooket vs Quizlet

Quizlet is better for individual study and flashcard-style learning. Blooket is better for live classroom sessions and group engagement. Many teachers use both — Quizlet for individual study, Blooket for group review.

FAQs About the Blooket Dashboard

Is the Blooket dashboard free to use?

Yes. Most features are free. The free plan gives teachers unlimited question sets, 18 game modes, live games for up to 60 players, homework assignments, and basic analytics. Blooket Plus adds advanced features for $4.99 per month.

Do students need an account to use Blooket?

Students do not need an account to join a live game. They enter a Game ID at play.blooket.com and play as a guest. However, without an account, student progress is not saved, which means they cannot access coins or unlocked Blooks. An account is recommended for students who want to track their history and build their collection.

Can teachers track individual student progress over time?

Yes. Using the Classes tab, teachers can group students and view performance across multiple sessions. The History tab shows individual accuracy per game. Combined, these two sections give a clear picture of each student’s progress over a semester.

Can the teacher and student dashboards do the same things?

No. Each dashboard is built specifically for its user. Teachers have content creation, hosting controls, class management, and full analytics. Students have game access, homework viewing, token management, and their Blook collection.

How do students earn tokens?

Students earn tokens by playing games — both live sessions and solo homework. They also earn tokens from the daily spin wheel available after logging in. Tokens cannot be purchased with real money. They are earned only through engagement with the platform.

What is a Solo Link and how does it work?

A Solo Link is a shareable direct URL that teachers generate from a question set. Students click the link and immediately start a self-paced game — no game code required and no menu navigation needed. It is useful for homework, absent students, early finishers, and station rotations.

What happens to student data if a teacher deletes a question set?

Game history from past sessions remains in the History tab even if the original question set is deleted. The results are saved at the session level, not tied to the set itself.

Is Blooket safe for students?

Blooket is generally safe when used properly. The platform aligns with common educational privacy standards. Students under 13 must use Blooket under school or parental supervision. Teachers control all game content and settings. Guest play requires no personal information from students.

Conclusion

The Blooket dashboard is more useful than most teachers realize when they first sign up. The surface layer is a game launcher. Underneath it is a content library, a homework system, a student analytics engine, and a motivation loop that keeps students coming back voluntarily.

Start with three things: explore the Discover tab for sets in your subject area, run one live session this week and check the History results afterward, and let your students know that Blooks exist. That last one will do more for engagement than any lesson plan adjustment.

The free plan gives you everything you need to start. Once Blooket becomes a regular part of your teaching routine, the Plus plan adds enough analytical and management depth to justify the cost.

The dashboard is not complicated — it just needs to be explored once with a clear map. Now you have one.