


Then I typed in my second question on the two new master sides. I just copied the two master slides (“Sound†and “No soundâ€) and renamed them (“Question 2 Sound†and “Question 2 No Soundâ€). But, I was able to make more questions on the same presentation rather than saving a bunch of files. Thank you so much for your work! This is awesome – perfect as a review game for my students. NOTE – for this version you need to start on slide 6. ‘1’ reveals answer 1′, ’12’ reveals answer 1 and 2, ’21’ reveals all except for 1 and 2 and so on. The slides are also rearranged so you can control it manually by pressing the number keys instead of using a mouse. This is a simplified version that needs the ‘wrong guess’ sound effect to be played from an ipod but it is much faster to load. This is a very big version that takes longer to load but has all the sound effects in it. Here is a link to the keynote templates – there are two versions: If there is a corrrect answer guessed, click on the appropriate box to reveal that answer – complete with sound effects! For a wrong answer, click anywhere on the background. To play the game, start the slideshow at slide number 1. Be careful not to move any fields around, just edit the text in them. To do this select ‘Edit Master Slide’ and edit the text fields that have the answers. To change the answers, edit the master slide.

The text for the questions and answers is on the master slide. I found the best way to do it was to have 25 slides with the different possible combinations of hidden/shown answers, then a heap of hyperlinks between various slides depending on what answer was picked. I wanted a ‘family feud’ style gameshow in keynote, but it was a bit complicated trying to make the right answer appear.
