Blooket Bot Spam | What you can do

Blooket bot spam refers to the use of automated tools or scripts to flood Blooket games with fake participants (bots), which can disrupt gameplay by overwhelming the system, skewing quiz results, and causing confusion.

These bots are often deployed by students for entertainment or pranks and can be called various names like Blooket Bomber, Blooket Ninja, or Blooket Spammer. They function by simulating user participation, sometimes with customizable bot names to evade detection.

If you’re seeing or dealing with bot spam on Blooket (for example bots flooding your game, spamming chat, or joining with fake accounts), here’s what it is, why it happens, and what you can do (especially if you’re a teacher/host).


✅ What’s happening

“Bot spam” in Blooket means automated accounts (or scripts) are joining a game, often en masse, doing one or more of the following:

  • Joining instantly when the game code is shared.

  • Using random/fake usernames, or spamming chat.

  • Auto-answering, auto-leaving, or otherwise disrupting the session.

  • Making it difficult for real players to participate or for the teacher to manage the game.

Also Read : fubo.tv/help-signup | Sign-up process for Fubo TV


⚠️ Why this matters

  • It undermines the learning objective of Blooket (the platform is meant to be educational and fun).

  • It can ruin gameplay or the class session: huge lobbies, lag, weird behaviour.

  • It may violate the terms of service of the platform and could lead to bans.

  • If you use external “bot tools” you risk security issues (malware, phishing, etc).


🔧 What you can do (if you’re a host / teacher)

Here are steps you can take to reduce or prevent bot spam in your Blooket sessions:

  1. Keep the Game Code Private

    • Don’t post the code publicly or where anyone can copy it. Share it only with trusted participants.

  2. Use Student ID Mode or Equivalent Restricted Access

    • If your institution or Blooket plan allows, use modes that restrict who can join.

  3. Monitor the Lobby Before Starting

    • Before you start the game, scan the lobby list for strange usernames (lots of bots often use random names or join too fast). You can remove suspicious participants.

  4. Limit Maximum Players / Set Manual Start

    • Use a player limit so you don’t allow an overwhelming lobby. Use “manual start” so you can check before initiating.

  5. Teach Students About Fair Play

    • Remind players that bots or hacks are unfair and may lead to disciplinary or account consequences. Helps set culture.

  6. Report to Blooket if You See Bot Abuse

    • Use the platform’s support or report systems if you see bot behaviour repeatedly.

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