Build, launch, and host your game with confidence.
Right Price is designed for fast setup: choose a mode, add your questions, invite players, reveal answers, and add points as the host.
How to play
Choose the kind of game
Use Classic Guess Mode when players estimate a number, price, date, distance, total, or value. Use Clue Mode when players identify a person, place, image, product, vocabulary word, scenario answer, or mystery item.
Add your questions
Write clear prompts, add the correct answer, choose a category label, and include an image or clue when it helps players understand what they are guessing.
Invite players
Launch the host view, share the join link or code, and let players join from phones, tablets, or laptops before the first round begins.
Host the game live
Show the current prompt, let players submit answers, reveal the correct answer, mark the correct or closest response, and add points.
Choosing the right mode
Classic Guess Mode
Best for numeric answers: prices, costs, years, dates, distances, quantities, scores, totals, budgets, percentages, and estimates.
Clue Mode
Best for identifying things: people, places, products, vocabulary words, images, objects, scenarios, mystery prizes, and company facts.
Good game design tips
- Keep prompts short enough to read from the back of a classroom or meeting room.
- Use specific answer formats such as dollars, miles, years, people, percent, or one-word answer.
- For training games, add explanation text so the reveal reinforces the learning objective.
- For parties and family games, personalize rounds with names, memories, photos, and inside jokes.
- For younger players, use Clue Mode or multiple-choice style prompts before moving into harder estimates.
Troubleshooting
Players cannot join
Confirm the host has launched a live session and is sharing the current join link or code. If the game was restarted, use the newest link.
A player submitted the wrong answer
The host can still choose which answer is correct or closest before adding points. Scores only increase when the host awards points.
The game is hard to read on a projector
Use shorter prompts, larger images, and fewer words per round. The live game screens are designed around big cards and high-contrast text.
A template does not match the event
Use the template as a starting structure, then replace the title, prompts, answer keys, explanations, and categories with your own content.
Need help planning a game?
Send the game topic, audience, event date, and the kind of answers players will guess. The more specific the topic is, the easier it is to shape strong rounds.