Blooket for Teachers: Honest Review + Alternatives (2026)
Honest review of Blooket for teachers — what it does well, where it falls short, and three alternatives worth trying.

What Blooket does well
Blooket is a real tool used by real teachers, and pretending it has no value would be dishonest. Where it shines: 25+ game modes, live play, solo practice, homework assignments, and student-friendly variety.
If your teaching workflow lines up with those strengths, Blooket is a reasonable choice and you do not need to switch tools just because something newer exists.
Where Blooket falls short for some teachers
Every tool has trade-offs. With Blooket, the honest weaknesses are: reporting is shallow compared to Kahoot. No content marketplace, no spaced-repetition smart practice, and the game modes can distract from review density for some classes.
If any of those trade-offs are a deal-breaker for your context — a tight budget, a need for connected gradebook data, a different age group than Blooket was built for — it is worth looking at alternatives before you commit.
Three alternatives worth trying
1. Kahoot
Kahoot is strong for live quiz energy, leaderboards, reports, AI generation, standards tagging, and a huge content library.
2. Gimkit
Gimkit is strong for strategic game modes, student-paced assignments, classes, saved progress, and reports for completed assignments.
3. KiwiBee
KiwiBee — free for individual teachers and built to connect lessons, classroom games, behaviour points (ClassSpark), the gradebook, and a parent portal in one platform. Worth a look if the standalone tool feels disconnected from the rest of your teaching. Try it free at app.kiwibee.io.
How to choose
If your priority is energy, novelty, or a familiar workflow you already use weekly, Blooket is probably the right call. If your priority is having the activity connect to the rest of your teaching — lessons, gradebook, behaviour, parent communication — one of the three alternatives above is worth a trial week.