Blooket Bot Flooder
Teachers use Blooket because it makes learning fun. A bot flooder can wipe out 10 minutes of a 45-minute class, forcing the teacher to abandon the game and assign a worksheet instead. You aren’t just annoying the host—you’re hurting your own classmates’ learning experience.
Blooket’s Terms of Service explicitly prohibit: blooket bot flooder
"Using any automated system, bot, or script to interact with the Service." Teachers use Blooket because it makes learning fun
Blooket has implemented server-side bot detection. If you are logged into a Blooket account while using a flooder, that account will be flagged and permanently suspended. You lose all progress, rare Blooks, and stats. Blooket’s Terms of Service explicitly prohibit:
From a technical perspective, bot flooding is a form of a Denial of Service (DoS) attack, though usually on a much smaller scale than those used to take down major websites.
Thousands of teachers have reported bot flooding during review games. In response, schools now track network traffic. If you flood a game from a school Chromebook or lab computer, IT administrators can trace the activity back to your login session. Consequences range from detention to loss of computer privileges.