Need to join a meeting?


20 Interactive Presentation Games
- Employee Engagement , Event Planning , Leadership Techniques

Meetings and conferences can be painfully tedious and dull. So much so that the phrase “Death by PowerPoint” has made it into our lexicon. According to Thomas Sowell , an American political economist and commentator, “People who enjoy meetings should not be in charge of anything.”
But if the problem with meetings is that they tend to be boring, the solution lies in finding ways to better engage and entertain your audience. You probably know the feeling of sitting in a meeting, trying to pay attention while one person drones on for an hour.
Even if the purpose of the meeting is to train, disseminate new developments, or even get everyone up to speed on weekly goals, engaging your audience creates a motivation to pay attention.
That’s why interactive presentation games are a great way to re-energizing meetings by involving audiences in the presentation. Interactive presentation turn passive listeners into active participants. Games allow the attendees to learn new skills, think of solutions within a short time period, and solve problems together.
MeetingPulse equips your team with the tools and resources to create engaging events. With that in mind, here’s our guide to a few popular interactive presentation games.
Related: Creating a Positive Organizational Culture while working remote
1. Project Jeopardy

This game is designed to make the presentation of reports more fun and interactive. The lead person on the report creates cards that have answers from the report.
For example, the card reads “25%.” The rest of the team is supposed to ask the correct question corresponding to the “25%” answer on the card. The question could be something like, “What was the company revenue growth for the quarter?”
How to play: Give everyone the URL to your MeetingPulse meeting. Display the question on your screen and create multiple choice answers or leave it open-ended. The answers will pop up on the administrator’s screen in real-time, and you can share the answers to see how many people got it right.
2. Idea Box Game

The Idea Box game is excellent for brainstorming meetings where employees can share ideas about a project or product . It helps get the creative juices flowing and might even lead to some usable prototypes. Instead of having one speaker after another speak about their idea, having a team create an idea box creates a space for collaboration to further spark innovation.
How to play: Use the MeetingPulse brainstorming tool to have teams vote and collect feedback about the products. Have each attendee log in to your MeetingPulse link — a virtual Idea Box. Give small groups thirty minutes to brainstorm, then allow submissions.
At the end of the exercise, each team should have the product name, features and functions, marketing taglines, and other vital product details.
Once each team has completed their box they’re invited to share it with the rest of the team who finally vote for the best box. Their ideas will appear on the screen right away, and participants can upvote or downvote in Reddit-style fashion and even submit emoji reactions.
3. The Introduction Game

This game is ideal for a new group of team members meeting for the first time on a mutual project or new hires joining a team. Give the new hires a chance to introduce themselves in an unforgettable manner.
How to play: Ask the new members to bring a personal item or a favorite song. During the meeting, introduce them by letting their song blare for a few minutes on the sound system and then ask them to say something about themselves. If you’re using the personal item, ask them to talk about the item and what it means to them.
4. The talking stick

This activity makes sure that anyone who has a contribution not only gets to do so, but also that they get to speak uninterrupted. Using the talking stick is a great, rapid-fire way to focus the meeting on deep and meaningful contributions.
How to play: Form a circle and make sure everyone’s seated. Before the discussion begins, everyone should agree that the moderator has the power to choose whoever speaks next. Once a member finishes talking, they should put the stick back in the center for the next person.
Use the MeetingPulse audience feedback capability to gain insight right away. Choose up to four emojis and allow your audience to react as they listen to new ideas.
5. Telephone game

The telephone game is used typically as an ice breaker or to liven up a group after a couple of mind-numbing presentations. While it doesn’t really work with a very large group, a sizable number like 10 to 15 people is just right.
How to play: The meeting leader whispers the latest company marketing strategy used to the person on their left who is then supposed to relay the message to the next person and on and on until the last person gets the message.
The last person then gets to tell the rest of the team the final message, and you can compare it to the primary message from the lead.
6. The trivia competition

You can use this game to test the attendees’ trivia knowledge of the company or of general business trends . Create a trivia competition where the members play for points and the winner gets a prize. Project the points for everyone to see the winner.
How to play: Formulate questions related to the company and use them for the trivia test. You can use MeetingPulse to create the questions, and set the timer to begin the game together. To add an extra touch of fun, include images with your multiple choice questions. Visuals add to the level of engagement and give your meetings an extra edge.
7. Fill in the phrase

Check out Meeting Pulse for Cool and creative ways to make polling questions and Quizzes!
This game requires participants to fill in blanks on a survey or report. The survey or report should not be complete until the end of the presentation. This game rewards audiences for listening, and you can even provide some sort of prize.
How to play: Create a report for attendees that has blanks. As you continue with the presentation, invite them to fill in the blanks from the information you are giving. Not only does the audience remain engaged, but they retain crucial information better.
MeetingPulse integrates with Powerpoints , so you can use our single answer polling feature to play this game and display the results directly in your PowerPoint presentation.
8. Word of the day

Have a word of the day game as part of your presentation or meeting. It can be a phrase or a word.
How to play: The presenter should weave the word or phrase into their presentation and the audience acknowledges its use by shouting back. The word must come from the team and not the presenter. This activity keeps everyone alert. Sometimes shouting can be distracting in the middle of a meeting.
In this case, use the MeetingPulse emoji feature, and everyone can submit ? when you use the word “key learnings.”
9. The 20 questions game

You get 20 questions to help you identify a picture that you can’t see, but the audience can. The audience can only lead you with yes or no questions. Use this game to liven up the audience.
How to play: The audience will choose a picture that you can’t see. Have someone submit a photo and display it on the MeetingPulse user dashboard. Get blindfolded and begin to ask questions regarding the picture. You get only twenty questions to get it right.
If you’re an advertising agency, you can use this test your employees’ memory and see if they remember what you worked on. To keep track of all the questions and responses, have the audience choose “yes” or “no” by using a polling tool instead of having them shout it out.
10. Call and response

This game keeps the audience focused. The leader in the meeting calls out a phrase randomly during their presentation and the audience responds to it .
How to play: Agree on the action to be taken every time the phrase is called out. The second the presenter calls out the word, your audience can dance, clap or just rise and seat. Alternatively, they can respond with a phrase, word, or an emoji using MeetingPulse.
11. What would I have done?
In this game, ask each member of the team what their alternative career would be. The point of the game is to open up to each other and foster conversation.
How to play: Each member writes down their alternative career and waits their turn to reveal. The audience collectively asks “What would you have done?” and the selected member responds explaining why they chose that alternative. This is another great game you can play virtually, especially if you’re working with a big team.
With MeetingPulse , you can find out everyone’s alternative career and even get some statistics.
12. Fabulous flags

In this game , team members draw things that matter to them on their flag. This is known as the personal flag game, and it’s an excellent ice breaker activity.
How to play: Everyone gets 10 minutes to draw objects or symbols that represent something meaningful in their lives. Each person gets two minutes to explain the items on their flag.
13. Botticelli

Similar to 20 questions, this game also tests your trivia. You keep in mind a person, place, or thing, and the audience has to guess. The game is a bit more complex because the player can talk back to the audience and distract them from the name.
How to play: The audience asks leading questions to which the player responds with a yes or no. If they ask a specific question like “Does the celebrity’s name start with B?” then the player can respond with “It’s not Brad Pitt.”
This game is logistically easy to plan because all you need to do is formulate the poll questions and integrate them into your PowerPoint with MeetingPulse .
14. Candy introductions

This is a game that allows people to get to know each other while enjoying some sweet treats. It’s excellent for training sessions where participants are complete strangers, providing general topics for introductions that employees can elaborate upon further.
How to play: The participants choose different types of candy from a bag and use each to represent different topics about themselves during the introduction. They can talk about family, career, hobbies, unexpected characteristic and dream destinations.
15. Crazy job interview

In this game, one participant tries to convince the others why they would be the best for a certain job. They have to expound on qualities given by another player and how those qualities make them a good fit.
How to play: The participant is given a career, like a supermodel. Then they are given random phrases like “angry with the queen” or “intellectually incompatible” and they have to use these phrases to explain why they would be great at being a supermodel.
16. The elimination game

The elimination game helps participants to get to know each other, using a series of questions to find out the most common and most rare similarities amongst people within your company.
How to play: The whole room is asked to stand up. The leader then asks elimination questions like “how many are attending this conference for the first time?” That group gets to sit down. The next is “remain standing if this is your fourth consecutive attendance.” The rest of the group sits down. And the elimination questions continue.
17. Would you rather

This is a fun game to liven up the room, giving participants two choices of something they can do. They have to choose the lesser evil.
How to play: The player is given a question with two very bad or very good outcomes. For example, if the employees are afraid of heights, ask, “Would you rather go sky diving or bungee jumping?”
If you want to play this game with a large group of people, you can use MeetingPulse to get answers in real time. This game can also provide valuable insight for you. For instance, you can ask, “Would you rather have a breakfast spread or small desserts for our next meeting?”
18. Anagrams

Think up a word and have everyone else try to figure it out. Expect some hilarious answers as everyone chips in.
How to play: Jumble up the letters but ensure that they create a five or six letter word anagram when correctly aligned. Only the presenter should suggest the word, and the activity should be timed. People can submit their answers live on MeetingPulse .
19. Two truths and a lie

The players get to tell two truths and one lie about themselves and the audience deciphers which one is the lie.
How to play: The player chooses a topic, like “career.” They tell two real facts about their career and one lie. The audience then decides which statement is false and why they believe that.
20. Choose the Agenda

In this activity, the participants choose the agenda of the meeting instead of being told what it is. This allow them to address burning issues.
How to play: Participants are invited to submit their agendas, which are shared by everyone and then voted on. The one with the most votes becomes the main agenda for the meeting. This gives participants control over the meeting as well.
You can use MeetingPulse’s brainstorming tool with the upvoting feature for this!
Final Thoughts
Now that you know some of the best interactive presentation games, you’re ready to host your next event with new and creative ways to keep your audience engaged. MeetingPulse is a great tool and resource for you to make your presentations more memorable and — dare we say it — fun.
Related: 25 Fun Poll Questions to Ask Your Audience
Get started with MeetingPulse today!
Share this article on your socials, latest posts.

5 Ways to Support Inclusive Interaction at Life Science Events

Sales Survey: How to Gather Data from Potential Customers

Light a Fire with These Trivia Questions for Work Meetings

12 Pre-Event Survey Questions to Boost Engagement
Blog categories.
- Audience Response Tools
- Best Practices
- Employee Engagement
- Event Planning
- Hybrid Events
- Leadership Techniques
- Meeting Prep
- Organizational Development
- Uncategorized
Yes, it does. You can add MeetingPulse as a PowerPoint Add-in and see real-time results and changes right on your PowerPoint slide.
MeetingPulse works in any web browser and can be accessed from any device that uses one. You can also integrate MeetingPulse into your favorite video-meeting apps, such as Zoom , Webex , and Microsoft Teams , as well as video platforms like YouTube and Vimeo.
To make MeetingPulse a seamless addition to your meetings, we offer custom themes. You can use your own logo and your colors in Attendee View as well as Broadcast View. Your company name can also be included in the webpage’s title. Your meeting can also have its own domain. This is great if you are going to promote your meeting offline. For example, you could use “acme2022.com” instead of “meet.ps/acme-all-hands”.
Want to know more about what MeetingPulse can do? Go to the features page . Still need help? Contact us .

Live Product Tours
Weekly Product Tour Every Wednesday

- Success Stories
- Integrations
- Help center
- Cvent Marketplace
- Connect with Zapier
- Trust Center
- System Status

11 Interactive Presentation Games to Win Easy Engagement in 2023
Lawrence Haywood • 23 Aug 2023 • 9 min read
So, how to make a presentation engaging? Audience attention is a slippery snake. It’s difficult to grasp and even less easy to hold, yet you need it for a successful presentation.
No Death by PowerPoint, no to drawing monologues; it’s time to bring out the interactive presentation games !
These 11 games below are perfect for an interactive presentation . They’ll score you mega-plus points with colleagues, students, or wherever else you need a kick of super-engaging interactivity… So let’s check out those exciting presentation formats!
Table of Contents
#1: live quiz, #2: what would you do, #3: key number, #4: guess the order, #5: 2 truths, 1 lie.
- #6: 4 Corners
#7: Obscure Word Cloud
- #8: Heart, Gun, Bomb
- #9: Match Up
#10: Spin the Wheel
- #11: Q&A Balloons
Presentation Games for PowerPoint – Yes or No?
Frequently asked questions.
Host Live Presentation Games for Free!
Interactive presentations are guaranteed engagement. Make your whole event memorable for any audience, anywhere, with AhaSlides.
More Funs with AhaSlides
- Interactive Presentation
- Interactive Presentation Ideas
- Interactive Presentation Techniques

Start in seconds.
Get free templates for your next interactive presentation. Sign up for free and take what you want from the template library!
Is there any event that hasn’t been immediately improved with some trivia?
A live quiz is an evergreen, ever-engaging way to consolidate your presentation’s info and check the understanding of it all amongst your audience. Expect big laughs as your audience competes fiercely over who was listening to your presentation the most complex.
How to make it…
- Set up your questions on free quizzing software .
- Present your quiz to your players, who join by typing your unique code into their phones.
- Take your players through each question, and they race to get the correct answer the fastest.
- Check the final leaderboard to reveal the winner!
Learn how to set up your presentation quiz for free in just a few minutes! 👇
Put your audience in your shoes. Give them a scenario related to your presentation and see how they would deal with it.
Let’s say you’re a teacher giving a presentation on dinosaurs. After presenting your info, you would ask something like…
A stegosaurus is chasing you, ready to snap you up for dinner. How do you escape?
After each person submits their answer, you can take a vote to see which is the crowd’s favourite response to the scenario.
This is one of the best presentation games for students as it gets young minds whirring creatively. But it also works great in a work setting and can have a similar freeing effect, which is especially significant as a meeting ice breaker .
- Create a brainstorming slide and write your scenario at the top.
- Participants join your presentation on their phones and type their responses to your scenario.
- Afterwards, each participant votes for their favourite (or top 3 favourites) answers.
- The participant with the most votes is revealed as the winner!

No matter the topic of your presentation, there’s sure to be a lot of numbers and figures flying around.
As an audience member, keeping track of them isn’t always easy, but one of the interactive presentation games that makes it easier is Key Number .
Here, you offer a simple prompt of a number, and the audience responds with what they think it refers to. For example, if you write ‘ $25′ , your audience might respond with ‘our cost per acquisition’ , ‘our daily budget for TikTok advertising’ or ‘the amount John spends on jelly tots every day’ .
- Create a few multiple-choice slides (or open-ended slides to make it more complicated).
- Write your key number at the top of each slide.
- Write the answer options.
- Participants join your presentation on their phones.
- Participants select the answer they think the critical number relates to (or type in their answer if open-ended).
If keeping track of numbers and figures is challenging, it can be even tougher to follow entire processes or workflows explained in a presentation.
To cement this information in your audience’s mind, Guess the Order is a fantastic game for presentations.
You write the steps of a process, jumble them up, and then see who can put them in the right order the fastest.
- Create a ‘Correct Order’ slide and write your statements.
- Statements are automatically jumbled up.
- Players join your presentation on their phones.
- Players race to put the statements in the correct order.

You might have heard of this one as a great icebreaker, but it’s also one of the top presentation games for checking who’s paying attention.
And it’s pretty simple to do. Just think of two statements using the information in your presentation, and make another one up. Players have to guess which is the one you’ve made up.
This one is a great re-capping game and works for students and colleagues.
- Create a list of 2 truths and one lie covering different topics in your presentation.
- Read out two truths and one lie and get participants to guess the lie.
- Participants vote for the lie either by hand or through a multiple-choice slide in your presentation.
#6: 4 Corners – Interactive Presentation Games

The best presentations are ones that spark a bit of creative thinking and discussion. There’s no better presentation game for evoking this than 4 Corners.
The concept is simple. Present a statement based on something from your presentation that’s open to different points of view. Depending on each player’s opinion, they move to a corner of the room labelled ‘strongly agree’, ‘agree’, ‘disagree’ or ‘strongly disagree’ .
Maybe something like this:
An individual is shaped more by nature than nurture.
Once everyone is in their corner, you could have a structured debate between the four sides to bring different opinions to the table.
- Set up the ‘strongly agree’, ‘agree’, ‘disagree’ and ‘strongly disagree’ corners of your room (if running a virtual presentation, then a simple show of hands could work).
- Write some statements which are open to different opinions.
- Read out the statement.
- Each player stands in the right corner of the room, depending on their view.
- Discuss the four different viewpoints.

Live word clouds are always a beautiful addition to any interactive presentation. If you want our advice, include them whenever you can – presentation games or not.
If you do plan to use one for a game in your presentation, a great one to try is Obscure Word Cloud .
It works on the same concept as the popular UK game show Pointless . Your players are given a statement and have to name the most obscure answer they can. The least-mentioned correct answer is the winner!
Take this example statement:
Name one of our top 10 countries for customer satisfaction.
The most popular answers may be India, USA and Brazil , but the points go to the least mentioned correct country.
- Create a word cloud slide with your statement at the top.
- Players submit the most obscure answer they can think of.
- The most obscure one appears most diminutive on the board. Whoever submitted that answer is the winner!
Word Clouds for Every Presentation
Get these word cloud templates when you sign up for free with AhaSlides!

For Ice Breaking

For Testing

#8: Heart, Gun, Bomb.- Interactive Presentation Games

This one’s a great game to use in the classroom, but if you’re not looking for presentation games for students, it also works wonders in a casual work setting.
Heart, Gun, Bomb is a game in which teams take turns to answer questions presented in a grid. If they get an answer right, they either get a heart, a gun or a bomb…
- A ❤️ grants the team an extra life.
- A 🔫 takes away one life from any other team.
- A 💣 takes away one heart from the team who got it.
All teams start with five hearts. The team with the most hearts at the end, or the only surviving team, is the winner!
- Before starting, create a grid table for yourself with either a heart, gun or bomb occupying each grid (on a 5×5 grid, this should be 12 hearts, nine guns and four bombs).
- Present another grid table to your players (5×5 for two teams, 6×6 for three groups, etc.)
- Write a figure stat (like 25%) from your presentation into each grid.
- Split players into the desired number of teams.
- Team 1 chooses a grid and says the meaning behind the number ( for example, the number of customers last quarter ).
- If they’re wrong, they lose a heart. If they’re right, they get either a seat, gun or bomb, depending on what the grid corresponds to on your grid table.
- Repeat this with all the teams until there’s a winner!
>>> Get more interactive presentation ideas (Interactive PowerPoint ideas) with AhaSlides
#9: Match Up – Interactive Presentation Games
Here’s another quiz-type question that can be a great addition to your roster of presentation games.
It involves a set of prompt statements and a set of answers. Each group is jumbled; the players must match the information with the correct answer as quickly as possible.
Again, this one works well when the answers are numbers and figures.
- Create a ‘Match Pairs’ question.
- Fill out the set of prompts and answers, which will automatically shuffle.
- Players match each prompt with its answer as fast as possible to score the most points.
If there’s a more versatile presentation game tool than the humble spinner wheel , we aren’t aware of it.
Adding the random factor of a spinner wheel might be just what you need to keep engagement in your presentation high. There are presentation games you can use with this, including…
- Choosing a random participant to answer a question.
- Choosing a bonus prize after getting an answer correct.
- Choosing the next person to ask a Q&A question or give a presentation.
- Create a spinner wheel slide and write the title at the top.
- Write the entries for the spinner wheel.
- Spin the wheel and see where it lands!
Tip 💡 You can choose the AhaSlides spinner wheel to use your participants’ names, so you don’t have to fill in the entries manually! Learn more interactive presentation techniques with AhaSlides

#11: Q&A Balloons – Interactive Presentation Games

This one’s a great way to turn a regular end-of-presentation feature into a fun, engaging game.
It’s got all the hallmarks of a standard Q&A, but this time, all the questions are written on balloons.
It’s a super simple one to set up and play, but you’ll see how motivated participants are to ask questions when it involves balloons!
- Hand out a deflated balloon and a Sharpie to each participant.
- Each participant blows up the balloon and writes their question on it.
- Each participant bats their balloon to where the speaker is standing.
- The speaker answers the question and then pops or throws away the balloon.
So, how do you feel about AhaSlides’s creative ideas for presentations? Being by far the most popular presentation tool on the planet, you may want to know if there are any presentation games to play on PowerPoint.
Unfortunately, the answer is no. PowerPoint takes presentations incredibly seriously and doesn’t have a lot of time for interactivity or fun of any kind.
But there’s good news…
It is possible to directly embed presentation games into PowerPoint presentations with free help from AhaSlides.
You can import your PowerPoint presentation to AhaSlides with the click of a button, then place interactive presentation games like the ones above directly between your presentation slides.
💡 PowerPoint presentation games in less than 5 minutes ? Check the video below or our quick tutorial here to find out how!
Got a question? We've got answers.
Benefits of Playing Interactive Presentation Games?
How to make presentations more engaging, creative ways to present a project without powerpoint.
Lawrence Haywood
Former ESL teacher and quiz master converted to the wild slide. Now a content creator, traveller, musician and big time slider preaching the good word of interactivity.
More from AhaSlides

- Marketplace
- 10% More Robux
[🚽SKIBI TOILET] The Presentation Experience
Description.
Communication
Server Size
Allowed Gear
Thanks for visiting Roblox
Click RobloxPlayer.exe to run the Roblox installer, which just downloaded via your web browser.
Click Run when prompted by your computer to begin the installation process.
Click Ok once you've successfully installed Roblox.
After installation, click Join below to join the action!
The game where you give the Powerpoint presentation of your life.
Powerpoint karaoke (also called powerpoint roulette or battledecks) is an improv game where you give a presentation from a slide deck you’ve never seen..
It's a game that tests your skills, gets people laughing, and keeps everyone wondering what will happen next.
The name "Powerpoint Karaoke" comes from combining " PowerPoint ", the presentation software, and " karaoke ," the popular singing performance game.
Powerpoint Karaoke is great for:
- Company meetings and events
- Team-building activities
- Off-sites and retreats
- Workshops and trainings
- Meetups and conferences
- High-school or College classes
"[I] tried this with some of my coworkers and they absolutely loved it. We’re going to use this for fun activities that also reinforce presentation and teambuilding skills."
Brad Kriesman, Director, athenaUniversity
Learn How to Play
14 Fun & Interactive Presentation Games for Teams and Students

So you've got an audience to energize, students to engage, or a team that needs a little extra fun — playing an interactive presentation game is an easy way to do just that.
We've done the research and found the best of these games for you: we looked specifically for games that are simple to set up, fun to play, and flexible enough to be used with a variety of presentations and audiences. Most of these activities work virtually with Zoom/PowerPoint and can also be used in person.
Which of these 14 presentation games do you like best? Take a look and let us know your favorites:
1. Live Trivia Competition
A great way to ramp up the excitement and engagement is to enable a little bit of friendly competition. Trivia is an easy way to do this—plus, it can be whole-group inclusive and large-audience friendly (if you use the right tools).
Here's a great trivia game you can run with your team, students, or any large audience. It's already created for you with questions and scoring built in to make it even easier:
Here's how to play:
- Make a free account here: https://slideswith.com/
- Click the slide deck and copy it.
- Launch the trivia game by clicking "Start Event."
- Invite your group to join in and submit answers using their mobile devices (show the winners automatically).
- Interact and play during your presentation!
This trivia game has questions on many topics to keep your audience's attention and appeal to everyone. It only takes 10-15 minutes to play, so it's a great game for long discussions! Also, this interactive activity is free for up to ten participants and is totally customizable.
2. Sing and Swing
To really liven up your group, encourage your listeners to play Sing and Swing. This activity is best for long presentations because it boosts energy, creates a fun, light-hearted environment, and makes people laugh a lot.
Here's how to play:
- Before your presentation, pick a well-known song and rewrite the chorus (replace parts of it with words and phrases from your presentation)
- When you're ready to play, show the song on your screen.
- Invite your audience to sing it with you!
If you have a fun group or a class of energetic students, consider adding choreography to engage your audience even more.

3. 20 Questions
If you want a presentation game that requires your listeners to talk more than you, 20 Questions is the one to play! A classic and simple activity, this game immediately boosts engagement and gets people laughing.
Here's how to play: Have someone put an appropriate image or word on the screen behind you (this can be an audience member you trust or a colleague or co-presenter). To make things more fun, put on a blindfold so that everyone knows you can't cheat. From there, ask 20 "yes or no" questions to guess what's displayed on the screen. Your group should respond "yes" or "no" to guide you to the correct answer.
4. Scavenger Hunt Challenge
To get your audience out of their seats, a scavenger hunt challenge is one of the best interactive games for presentations. It'll immediately energize your audience , team, or students while giving them a fun way to learn.
There are tons of in-person and virtual scavenger hunt ideas you can use to dive deeper into your topic or help everyone learn about one another. But if you want a ready-to-play game that you can instantly launch without having any tech skills, here's a fun one to play:
- Use an email address and password to create a free account here: https://slideswith.com/ (a free account guarantees up to ten people can play at no charge).
- Click the game and press "Copy and use this slide deck."
- In the top right corner, click "Start Event."
- Ask listeners to join the game by using their mobile devices to scan the QR code. Players should continue using their mobile devices to submit answers to questions.
- Have everyone start hunting for items!
This activity is a particularly fun game because it's a photo-hunt, show-and-tell challenge! That means your audience will not only get out of their seats to find items, but they'll also get to take pictures and share and discuss photos of what they find. This conversational element will help engage your group!
5. Group Word Clouds
Whether you're speaking to team members, students, or conference-goers, this activity lets you ask questions and get your listeners' thoughts on specific topics.
This game is the perfect way to start your presentation, especially if you're discussing something with a wide range of opinions or are unsure how much your listeners know about a certain subject. Group Word Clouds is also beneficial if you want to do a quick meeting pulse or know how your listeners feel going into your presentation—understanding their energy levels and mood can help you adjust (if necessary) to get maximum engagement and excitement.
To enjoy this activity, keep things simple by using a tool that already offers a ready-to-play Group Word Clouds game. Here's a popular one you can launch immediately:
- Create a free account by entering an email and password here: https://slideswith.com/
- Click the game and then copy it (the button to do so is right underneath the slide deck).
- Press "Start Event" in the top right corner.
- Tell participants to play by scanning the QR code.
- Create word clouds and have fun!
This interactive game only takes 5-10 minutes to play, so it's a fast, fun way to engage your audience and feel out the room. Players can use their mobile devices to answer questions. This activity is also free for up to 10 people and is easy to personalize.
6. The Get to Know You Game
This activity is one of the best presentation games if you have a small group that doesn't really know each other. The Get to Know You Game is a creative way to do introductions, and it's really simple.
Here's how to play the game: Before the event, ask group members to bring a favorite song or item to the presentation (you can do this by emailing them). When you're ready to play, ask each person to introduce themself, present their song or item, and explain why they picked it. For those sharing a song, have them play it on their phones before they explain why it's their favorite.
7. Live Poll Questions
When you have a large group, it's not easy to find ways to boost engagement—but poll questions are the solutions, especially when they're live and interactive. With this unique setup, large groups engage by answering questions and seeing their answers displayed in a fun way.
Your job is to make sure you actually find a game that showcases responses uniquely to captivate your group. For a quick and great option, here's a popular icebreaker activity that promises to display responses using fun formats like word clouds, donut charts, live graphs, and per-player:
- Create an account for free to access the game: https://slideswith.com/
- Click the slide deck and press the button to copy it.
- Look in the top right corner of the deck and press "Start Event."
- Invite your group to play the game. They only need to use their mobile devices to scan the QR code.
- Start polling your audience!
This activity is one of those fun presentation games everyone will want to enjoy, so invite all of your team members and students to participate. This game can accommodate up to 250 players and takes 5-10 minutes to complete. Tell your group to use their mobile devices to submit their responses.
8. Assumptions
This interactive game is a great way to break up your presentation to see who's paying attention and who can answer questions pertaining to your topic.
- Ask your audience to stand up (for virtual presentations, make sure everyone's video is on).
- Show true or false statements on the screen one by one.
- Tell people to raise a hand if they think the statement is correct and sit down if they think it's incorrect.
- Continue until one person is left standing.
- Award the winner.
This activity can be as short and challenging as you want. Also, if your presentation is long, you can play multiple rounds to break up your speaking time and test your audience throughout your discussion.

9. Controversial Questions
Want to see where your audience, students, or team lands on controversial topics? Then, energize your presentation with a fun, creative game called Controversial Questions. This activity has prompts that inspire lively debates, so it's a great way to get your group excited and chatty.
However, to maintain a positive environment, make sure to find a tool that offers an office-friendly, classroom-friendly, and conference-friendly game. You don't want to sour the mood by creating uncomfortable division during your presentation. To make sure this game is fun and light-hearted, here's a popular one that's suitable for all audiences and ages:
- Sign up for a free account by inputting an email address and password here: https://slideswith.com/pricing
- Click the game and press the button that says, "Copy and use this deck."
- Press "Start Event" (the button is in the top right corner).
- Have participants join the fun by asking them to scan the QR code with their mobile devices.
- Get controversial and play!
This interactive game for presentations asks fun (but appropriate) questions like:
- Does pineapple belong on pizza?
- Does the person flying in the middle seat get both armrests?
- Should the toilet roll go over or under?
Players should use their mobile devices to submit answers. Up to ten people can play for free, and you can customize the game by updating the questions!
10. Word of the Day
With this activity, you can keep your audience, team, or students engaged throughout your entire presentation. This game requires listeners to be alert and recognize whenever you say the word of the day.
Here's how to play: At the beginning of your presentation, tell your group the word of the day (it can also be a phrase if you'd prefer). Say that you'll weave the word into your presentation and that your audience must shout it out whenever you mention it.
11. Mini Activity: Group Icebreaker
Whether you're doing an in-person or virtual presentation, you need to warm up your audience to get things started on a positive note. The best way to do that is with a quick icebreaker game.
However, make sure your questions are fun, positive, and engaging. You can easily do this by finding a game that already has the best icebreaker questions included. Here's one that's ready to play (and requiring no tech skills to launch):
- Input an email address and password to make a free account here: https://slideswith.com/
- Click the deck and copy it (press "Copy and use this deck).
- Click the button in the top right corner that says "Start Event."
- Invite participants to play by asking them to scan the QR code.
- Break the ice to warm up your audience!
Your group should use their mobile devices to submit responses to poll questions. Also, this game accommodates up to 250 players, but only ten people can join for free.
12. Process of Elimination
This activity is one of the best games for presentations because it's simple yet fun and great at helping listeners get to know each other. You can play it at the beginning of your presentation or in the middle to give your group a chance to stretch their legs.
- Before your event, create a list of "yes or no" questions.
- Once you're ready to play, tell your group to stand up (if you're doing a virtual presentation, make sure everyone's video is on).
- Ask each question one by one.
- Tell attendees to stand if their answer is "yes" and sit if their answer is "no."
The questions can relate to your topic or be totally random. Also, if you'd prefer to thin out the number of people standing, you can take a creative twist and ask your questions by saying something like this: "Stay standing if (insert scenario)." When phrasing each question this way, the game will end with one person standing. To acknowledge the winner, you can give them a round of applause or award them a prize.
13. Conference Opener Icebreaker
If you're speaking at a big conference, you need an interactive game for presentations that can get everyone involved and ensure every voice is heard. To achieve these goals, you should create an icebreaker game that works for large groups .
Using an easy, intuitive template is the best step to take. That way, you don't have to start from scratch or spend hours making your game. For a template that requires no code or tech-savviness to build on, here's the best option:
- Sign up by making a free account here: https://slideswith.com/
- Click on the game. On the next page, click the button to copy and use the deck.
- Customize the template using the instructions HERE .
- During your presentation, press "Start Event" in the top right corner.
- Ask the group to use their mobile devices to scan the QR code and join the fun. (Also, make sure participants use their mobile devices to submit answers.)
- Play and engage your audience!
This template has fun, interactive features built in to keep your large audience engaged. Those features include polls, word clouds, and ratings. Just make sure you sign up for a paid plan to accommodate the large number of people in your group—the free account only works for up to ten players.
14. Two Truths and a Lie
This classic game is a fun, energizing way to help your listeners get to know one another. It's perfect for small in-person or virtual groups and is an ideal activity for the beginning of your presentation.
Here's how to play: Pick any topic (for the purposes of this article, the topic will be "movies"). In no particular order, say two movies you've really watched and one you haven't watched. Ask your audience to guess which statement is the lie. The winner picks the next topic and says two truths and a lie.
Be Memorable With Presentation Games
Oftentimes, people forget presentations within a week or even days, and that's because the discussions are boring. But you don't work hard preparing a presentation for it to be forgotten. If you want your message to stick, all you have to do is make it enjoyable without being corny.
If you want to be remembered and actually get people engaged, you need to make your presentation fun and enjoyable, without coming off as corny or desperate to please. Ivan Dimitrijevic, 10 Secrets of Making Every Presentation Fun, Engaging, and Enjoyable
Luckily, the interactive presentation games in this article are unique and exciting—they're far from corny. So, use them for your upcoming presentations to make your messages compelling and memorable.
Subscribe for more articles like this
Try slides with friends for free.
The easiest way to host meetings your team will love
Engagement delivered to your inbox
We'll email you 1-2x per month with brand new, ready-to-run events and ideas. Subscribe to stay ahead of the curve and keep your lessons, meetings, and events fresh and engaging.

- Genshin Impact
Roblox The Presentation Experience Codes (September 2023)
Get ready to present!

Updated: September 12, 2023 Checked for new codes!
Get your note cards ready, it's time to present! Hop into a virtual classroom inside of The Presentation Experience and be whatever kind of student you want! Are you the class clown? The attentive listener? The sleeper? The one who reminds the teacher that there's homework? The choice is yours! Interact with your peers by spending points to cheer them on while they present, or throw them off with various sounds and physical interruptions! So how do you get points quickly? With codes of course!
All of the codes below can be used to redeem a certain amount of points, or even a special point boost if you're lucky! If you're looking for even more freebies, be sure to check back with this article regularly—we update this list as soon as new codes come out! If you find a code in the Working Codes section that seems expired, please let us know so we can remove it as soon as possible. Keep in mind, also, that you'll need to enter each code exactly as it's written or the experience won't accept it!
If you're looking for more Roblox content to browse while you wait for new codes, check out some of our best of articles including 5 best Roblox games like Call of Duty , 5 best Roblox games like Pokémon , or Best Roblox games like The Sims !
All The Presentation Experience Codes List
The presentation experience codes (working).
Here's a look at all the working The Presentation Experience codes.
- summerboost —Redeem for a 5x Point Boost for 10 min (New)
- OMG350KLIKES —Redeem for 50 Points
- unexpected —Redeem for 15 Gems
- UGC —Redeem for 30 Gems
- coffee —Redeem for 60 Points
- maxwellgood —Redeem for 20 Gems
- manfacepooper —Redeem for a 5x Point Boost for 10 min
- fartyreward —Redeem for 100 Points
- minimalgamespro —Redeem for 25 Points
- UwU —Redeem for 20 Gems
- Hallway —Redeem for 10 Gems
- pencil —Redeem for 100 Points
- 100MVISITS —Redeem for 15 Gems
- MILLIONMEMBERS! —Redeem for 10 Gems and 10 minutes of 5x XP
- therearenootherteachersintheschoolbecausenobodywantstoseethebadteacher —Redeem for 10 Gems
- nootnoot —Redeem for 75 Points
- Megaboost —Redeem for 5x Points for mone minute
- 5gems —Redeem for 5 Gems
- toilet —Redeem for 50 points
- itsaboutdriveitsaboutpower —Redeem for 150 Points
- poop - Redeem for 100 Points
- NikkoCoder - Redeem for 50 Points
- bookworm - Redeem for 80 Points
- code - Redeem for 15 Points
- RAT - Redeem for 25 Points
- Teachermadcuzbad - Redeem for 200 Points
The Presentation Experience Codes (Expired)
These The Presentation Experience codes no longer work.
- 200MVISITS! —Redeem for 100 Points
- CHRISTMASGIFT —Redeem for 39 Gems
- anfisanova —Redeem for 25 Points
- bababooeypoints —Redeem for 50 Points
- 180klikes —Redeem for 10 Gems
- Easter —Redeem for 8 Gems
- 700kmembers —Redeem for 10 Gems and a 1 minute 5x Points Boost
- 600kmembers —Redeem for 5 minutes of 2x Boost
- 175klikes —Redeem for 10 Gems and 5x Point Boost
- beatbox - Redeem for 30 Points
- sus - Redeem for 30 Points
How to Redeem The Presentation Experience Codes
It's easy to redeem codes for free rewards in The Presentation Experience ! To do so, simply follow the steps below.

- First, launch the experience
- Once inside, look for the Gear in the top left corner and click on it .
- Then, select the Twitter bird icon labeled Codes.
- Type or copy and paste a code into the new window that appears.
- Press confirm to receive your free reward!
How do I get more The Presentation Experience codes?
Codes for The Presentation Experience are typically released each time that the experience hits a new like milestone. To stay up to date on these codes, be sure to check back with this article often, join the Minimal Community Discord server, and join the Minimal Games Roblox group . Players who join the Roblox group will also receive a bonus 500 points and 10 Gems!
Why aren't my codes working?
Not all Roblox codes are active for the same amount of time, meaning some expire exceptionally quickly and may even become inactive after 24 hours or less! If you attempt to enter a code and it says Code Expired , that code is no longer active and, unfortunately, can no longer be redeemed. There's nothing that you can do to fix this issue, the code is simply unobtainable. If you attempt to type in a code and it says Invalid Code , however, this means that you've likely mistyped the code or neglected to use the correct capitalization. If this happens, try to retype and re-enter the code once more, being sure to copy it exactly as it's written!
What is The Presentation Experience?
The Presentation Experience is a school-based role play experience that allows players to take turns presenting randomly selected topics that are either created by the AI teacher or other players/students in the classroom. Once the teacher calls on you to present, you better be ready—you only have a few minutes to make a great impression! During presentations, other students can clap, scream, jump out of their seat, sleep, burp, and more to interrupt or cheer on their peers. The teacher will do her best to control the class, but it's only a matter of time before things get out of hand!
If you're looking for codes for other games, we have a ton of them in our Roblox Game Codes post! You can also get a bunch of free stuff via our Roblox Promo Codes page.
About the Author

More Stories by Jean-Pierre van Wyk
47 comments, cancel reply.
Comments are on moderation and will be approved in a timely manner. Please read the following rules before commenting:
- All comments must be on topic and add something of substance to the post
- No swearing or inappropriate words
- No asking or begging for anything free
- Do not attempt to start a poll in the comments
- Comments in all CAPS will be removed
- We reserve the right to remove a comment for any reason
- Do not impersonate a staff member or influencer
Save my nickname and email in this browser for the next time I comment.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

The Presentation Experience
- View history
- 4 Gamepasses
Gameplay [ ]
Every player sits at their desk as a student. Every 3 or 5 seconds, depending on if they have Roblox Premium, they earn Points that can be used to distract the presentation, from something very minor to extremely powerful.
When doing a presentation, a player or two may choose to do the presentation, or may be randomly called on by the Teacher, the main character of the game. Getting chosen depends on what the teacher requires.
The player will then have to discuss a topic that is shown on a whiteboard under a 40 or 80 second time limit. Once done, the other players will vote from 1 to 5 stars to say how the presentation is (by doing this the players get 5 Points). Depending on the rating, the teacher will reward the player with Points, for example, 5 will give you 10 Points. If nobody has rated the presentation, you will only get 1 Point.
The players that get the most stars in a single presentation will appear on a board at the back of the room and will get a star on their head after the teacher has congratulated to them.
The teacher also has a doll called Barney, that she uses to make him choose a student for a presentation occasionally. It is seen on the main thumbnail too. The character is inspired by the owner of the group that has created this experience, @BarneyCoder.
Actions [ ]
There are currently 124 actions. Most of them make the teacher to angry and say phrases, especially with the most powerful ones. The Basic actions are about normal actions followed by slightly more powerful ones. The Powerful ones are a continuation of the Basic ones and are very distracting. The Memes actions are about memes and have different power. Each of these actions of these categories can be repeated constantly one, three or 30 times, so that you don't have to click constantly.
The Robux actions are actions that are extremely powerful, since they are mostly about disasters. Make everyone do (action) and being sent in different places, such as in the restroom, outside and Backrooms for different lengths of time are also included. Do all actions 1x, 3, and 10x are part of this category and can be repeated to yourself, all the players in the classroom and in all servers; the last one costs 12,500 Robux! You can also choose your own topic for the presentation and even become the teacher with these.
The Robux actions are also bought through Gems, which are obtained daily in a certain amount.
There are currently 5 Badges in the experience.
Gamepasses [ ]
This section is a trivia section . Please relocate any relevant information into other sections of the article.
- If you read the book and click the last phrase (says to click it to close the book) you will be trolled by a Rickroll and given a code
- Playing on a private server will give the player twice as much points. It costs 99 Robux.
- Typing "Bad teacher" in chat makes the teacher angry and makes her say phrases like: "(player name), why are you so rude?". Typing "Good teacher" after this will mostly make her say things like: "I don't like lies, (player name)!"
- Typing "Sorry teacher" in chat makes the teacher forgive you after saying "Bad teacher" and say phrases like: "I forgive you, (player name)!"
- Typing "Good teacher" in chat either makes the teacher happy and makes her say the phrase, "Thank you, (player name)! :)" or make her think the student is joking.
- Typing "(number less than 21) IQ teacher" will make the teacher say things like: "Seems like (player name) doesn't know what IQ means". Typing "(number less than 60) iq teacher" will make the teacher say something like: "I'm a human, not a monkey, (player name)."
- Some actions can cause a few others actions to disappear until their end. For example, Do push-ups disables Use blender, Use laptop and a few others.
- 1 Community:Simbuilder
- 2 Roblox Innovation Awards 2023

IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
The processor of a computer is what allows it to perform calculations and to carry out other computer operations. In addition, the processor carries out instructions presented by a computer program, such as a game.
A presentation package is a software program that provides the resources necessary to give a professional presentation for meetings, lectures, speeches or other similar situations.
An award presenter should summarize the history and significance of the award being given, then honor and introduce the award recipient. The speech should be brief, positive and cheerful.
Honestly the "love of my life" could have gone much worse, Michael from Vsauce is a pretty solid pick for a life partner.
Welcome to the funniest school roleplay game! You can either hold a presentation or interrupt someone else's presentation! Spend your Points
20 Interactive Presentation Games · 1. Project Jeopardy · 2. Idea Box Game · 3. The Introduction Game · 4. The talking stick · 5. Telephone game · 6. The trivia
#1: Live Quiz · #2: What Would You Do? · #3: Key Number · #4: Guess the Order · #5: 2 Truths, 1 Lie · #6: 4 Corners · #7: Obscure Word Cloud · #8:
... game! You can either hold a presentation or interrupt someone else's presentation! Spend your Points to do actions like cough, fart, scream
Powerpoint Karaoke (also called Powerpoint Roulette or Battledecks) is an improv game where you give a presentation from a slide deck you've never seen.
Behance is the world's largest creative network for showcasing and discovering creative work.
4. Scavenger Hunt Challenge. To get your audience out of their seats, a scavenger hunt challenge is one of the best interactive games for presentations. It'
The Presentation Experience is a fun game on Roblox that lets you play as a student who has to give presentations on random topics. You can
To do so, simply follow the steps below. Screenshot by Pro Game Guides. First, launch the experience; Once inside, look for the Gear in
The Presentation Experience is a Comedy experience developed by Minimal Games where players are in a classroom holding presentations.