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To make a Blooket from a PDF, generate the questions with an AI quiz maker first, then load them into a Blooket question set with the spreadsheet (CSV) import. Blooket does not read documents or write questions on its own, so the AI step turns your PDF, slides, or notes into multiple-choice items, and Blooket runs them as a live game. The fast path: create the questions, paste them into Blooket's CSV template, mark each correct answer by number, and upload.
Blooket is one of the most-used review games in US classrooms, and students will happily play it. The catch is the prep. Before anyone joins a game, a teacher has to build a question set: read the material, write each question and four answer choices, and flag the right one. For a 20-question set that is most of a planning period. This guide walks through making a Blooket the normal way and the faster way, where AI drafts the questions from a file you already have and Blooket's import tool loads them in bulk.
You make a Blooket question set by signing in, opening the set creator, and adding each question with up to four answer choices and one or more correct answers marked. Every game mode in Blooket pulls from a question set, so the set is the part you build once and reuse. Here is the full sequence:
Typing questions one at a time is fine for a quick five-item set. For anything longer, the import tool below is far faster, and AI removes the writing step entirely.
Make a Blooket from a PDF by generating the questions with an AI quiz maker, then importing them into a Blooket set. Blooket cannot open a PDF or build questions from it, so the AI does the reading and writing while Blooket handles the game. The workflow looks like this:
This keeps the part Blooket is good at (an engaging review game students want to play) and removes the part it leaves to you (writing the questions). If your source is a slide deck, export it to PDF first and the same path works.
Yes. Blooket has a CSV import that lets you build a whole question set from a spreadsheet instead of typing each item. On the set creator page, click CSV Import to copy or download Blooket's template, fill in your questions and answers, mark each correct answer by its position number, save the file as a .csv, and upload it. The set then opens in the editor for any final tweaks.
A few formatting rules matter. Do not edit the colored header cells in the template. The correct-answer column takes numbers only: enter 1, 2, 3, or 4 to match the position of the right option. For questions where students type the answer, mark the typing column. Because an AI quiz maker already outputs each question with its correct answer, you can drop the generated set into the template and have a full Blooket ready in a couple of minutes.
AI cannot host the game inside Blooket, but it can write the entire question set from your material, which is the slow part. You run an AI quiz maker on your PDF or notes, it drafts the questions and answer choices, you review them, and then you import the set into Blooket. Blooket's own tools do not read your documents, so this split (AI writes, Blooket plays) is the practical way to automate the prep.
Question quality tracks source quality. Clear notes with full sentences produce sharper questions than a file that is mostly headings or images. For multiple choice in particular, you want wrong answers that are plausible, not obvious throwaways; you can generate a full multiple-choice set with an AI MCQ maker and load the items straight into Blooket's four-option format.
The two tools solve different halves of the job. Blooket is a game platform; an AI quiz maker is a question-writing engine. Used together, you skip the prep and keep the game.
| Task | Blooket alone | AI quiz maker plus Blooket |
|---|---|---|
| Writing the questions | You type every one by hand | Drafted from your PDF in under a minute |
| Reading source material | You read and decide what to ask | AI extracts the key points for you |
| Writing wrong answers | You invent each distractor | Plausible distractors generated automatically |
| Bulk loading a set | CSV import or type one by one | Generate, paste into the CSV template, upload |
| Hosting the game | Built in, the whole point | Built in, still Blooket |
| Time for a 20-question set | 40 to 60 minutes | 5 to 10 minutes |
The point is not to drop Blooket, just to stop writing questions from scratch. Let AI turn your material into a set, then use Blooket for what it does best.
A Blooket review game works best at 15 to 25 questions for a full class session and 8 to 12 for a quick warm-up or exit check. Most game modes loop through the set repeatedly as students answer, so you do not need a huge bank; 20 solid questions give plenty of repetition without padding. Past about 30, you are mostly adding filler that does not teach more.
Aim for coverage over volume. A tight set that touches every key idea beats a long one stuffed with trivia. When you generate from a file, start near that range and cut any question that tests a detail no one needs to remember. For more on writing options that actually discriminate, see our guide to writing good multiple choice questions.
If your material is a scanned worksheet or a photo of a handout, run it through OCR first so the text is machine-readable, then generate questions from the clean file. An AI quiz maker writes questions from text, not from a flat image, so a scan with no recognized characters gives it nothing to work with. Tools like docuocr.com convert a scanned document into selectable text you can then turn into a quiz.
Once the worksheet is readable, the rest of the flow is identical: upload, generate, review, and import into Blooket. This is the path for older handouts, printed packets, and anything that started on paper.
Making a Blooket comes down to two halves: build the question set, then play it. Blooket nails the game and leaves you the writing. Hand the question-writing to an AI quiz maker that reads your PDF, slides, or notes, review the draft, format it into Blooket's CSV template, and import. You keep the game students love while skipping the hour of prep. If your Blooket doubles as a graded record for a training or compliance session, you can attach a signed completion acknowledgment with signsend.com, and course creators who want to turn the same lesson into a published article can do it with rankable.ai. Once you have run the loop once, every document you own is a game waiting to happen, whether it becomes a Blooket, a live Kahoot made from a PDF, a self-paced Quizizz made from a PDF, or a graded quiz in the platform most US classrooms already use when you make a quiz in Google Classroom from a PDF.