Gimkit turns quiz content into live games where students earn in-game currency for correct answers. Teachers build question sets called Kits, then run them as real-time games or send them as homework. The free plan covers the basics. Gimkit Pro adds larger Kits, advanced assignments, and extra customization. Here’s how to get set up and run your first session.

How to Open a Gimkit Account

Go to gimkit.com and click Sign Up in the top-right corner. You can register with a Google account or enter an email and password directly.

Select the Teacher option when prompted. This unlocks Kit creation, live game hosting, and student management. Student accounts have fewer controls and can’t build or assign Kits.

The free plan is enough to start. It covers Kit creation and live gameplay. Gimkit Pro removes the question limit per Kit and adds homework assignment tools. You can upgrade anytime from account settings.

Understanding the Gimkit Dashboard

After you open a Gimkit account, the dashboard has three sections worth knowing before anything else.

My Kits
Stores all question sets you’ve built or imported. This is where you’ll spend most of your setup time.
Assignments
Sends a Kit to students as independent homework with a set deadline and shareable link.
Classes
Groups students together so you can assign content and track progress by class period.

Setting up Gimkit classes early makes assigning content to specific groups much faster once you have multiple Kits built.

How to Create a Kit in Gimkit After Opening Your Account

Click New Kit on your dashboard. Enter a name, pick a language, and choose a subject. Gimkit then lets you add questions three ways.

Method 01
Manual Entry
Type the question, add at least two answer choices, and mark the correct one. Images and audio can attach to any question.
Method 02
Quizlet Import
Export a Quizlet set, copy the text, then paste it into Gimkit’s Import Flashcards field. Questions generate automatically.
Method 03
Question Bank
Pull pre-built questions from Gimkit’s library across multiple subjects. Useful for filling gaps without writing every question.

Gimkit’s smart repetition system shows questions students struggle with more often during gameplay. This happens automatically — no extra setup needed.

For a full walkthrough on structuring question sets, the guide on how to create a Kit in Gimkit covers formatting options and common mistakes in more detail.

Gimkit Game Modes You Can Run After Opening an Account

Each mode changes how students interact with the questions. The chart below shows how three modes compare across pace, collaboration, and pressure.

Mode Pace Collaboration Pressure
Classic
Floor is Lava
Trust No One
Pace
Collaboration
Pressure

Classic works as a starting point. The Floor is Lava adds urgency — currency drops over time, so students must keep answering to stay in the game. Trust No One introduces a social element where players identify imposters, which also doubles as a team-building activity for middle school.

The full list of 2D game modes goes beyond these five. Running a mode on your own before using it in class helps you anticipate how students will react.

Free Plan vs. Gimkit Pro: What Changes After You Open a Gimkit Account

Feature Free Plan Gimkit Pro
Kit creation Yes Yes
Live game hosting Yes Yes
Questions per Kit Up to 5 Unlimited
Homework assignments No Yes
In-game shop upgrades No Yes
Class management tools Basic Full access
Student progress tracking Basic Detailed reports

Running a Live Game or Sending a Gimkit Assignment

Live play runs in real time. Gimkit generates a join code when you start the session. Students enter it at gimkit.com/join on any device. You can monitor the leaderboard during the game and pause to address questions students are missing most.

For tips on managing the live session from the teacher side, the guide on hosting a Gimkit game covers what to watch for during gameplay.

Gimkit assignments let students work through a Kit independently. Set a deadline, share the link, and Gimkit tracks completion automatically. This works well for pre-test review or independent practice.

You can also organize students into Gimkit groups within a class to run differentiated games or track smaller cohorts separately.

FAQs

How do I open a Gimkit account as a teacher?

Go to gimkit.com, click Sign Up, and select Teacher during registration. You can use a Google account or email. The free plan activates immediately with access to Kit creation and live games.

Is Gimkit free to use?

The free plan includes Kit creation and live gameplay but limits Kits to five questions. Gimkit Pro removes that cap, adds homework tools, and unlocks in-game shop features during live sessions.

Can Gimkit be used for math questions?

Yes. Word problems, calculations, and formula questions all work within the standard question format. The timed format in modes like The Floor is Lava adds pressure that suits math drills.

Can students build their own Kits in Gimkit?

Yes. Students can create Kits through their own accounts. Student-made Kits work well for peer-review exercises before exams. Setting question quality guidelines before they start keeps the content usable.

How do students join a Gimkit game?

Students go to gimkit.com/join and enter the code the teacher generates at the start of a live session. No account is required to join a live game as a student.

Francesco is a maker, engineer, and 3D printing enthusiast passionate about building tools and spaces that inspire creativity. With a background in software development and hands-on hardware projects, he explores the intersection of digital fabrication, productivity, and modern workspaces. When he’s not designing or experimenting, Francesco shares insights to help others create smarter, more efficient environments for work and making.