On his laptop, a terminal window scrolled lines of green text—scripts compiling, bots spawning. Twenty usernames. Then fifty. Then two hundred. All of them poised to invade Mr. Henderson’s 8th grade history quiz on the Roman Empire.

Many sites claiming to offer "free Quizizz bots" are actually hubs for intrusive ads, survey scams, or even browser-based malware.

If you're looking to your Quizizz games from bots:

Instead of a public "Live" game with a generic code, assign the quiz through a Learning Management System (LMS) like Google Classroom or Canvas. Monitor Your Lobby:

The motivations behind using a flooder vary, but they usually fall into three categories: Students looking to disrupt a lesson for a laugh.

Deep features of these tools typically focus on bypassing Quizizz’s security and maximizing the "flood" impact: