Gimkit used to be a simple quiz game.
We used to answer questions, earn virtual cash, win. That was it.
But things have changed.
Today, Gimkit is something else entirely.
It’s unpredictable with new game modes that turn classrooms into warzones.
Gimkit has created a completely different experience.
If you’ve played these modes, you know exactly what I’m talking about.
But here’s the question: out of all the madness,
which Gimkit mode is the craziest?
I played them all. I’ve analyzed how they work. I’ve looked at how players react.
And now in this guide I will breaks down the top 3 craziest Gimkit game modes.
#3: Snowbrawl

Snowbrawl looks simple at first.
You get placed on a team, answer questions and throw snowballs at the other team.
But players don’t just answer to win points — they answer to survive.
Every correct answer gives you snowballs, and those snowballs are your only way to attack.
If you run out, you’re helpless.
You can’t defend yourself.
Can’t help your team, you are just a sitting duck.

The next, you’re frozen in the middle of the map,.
And that’s what makes Snowbrawl so crazy.
It’s unpredictable, competitive, chaotic.
You’re always in motion, trying to balance offense with defense, thinking two moves and giving correct answers as fast as you can.
If your class is loud during Snowbrawl, that’s normal.
If people scream when they get frozen, that’s expected.
This mode brings out everyone’s competitive side, and it doesn’t let up until the final second.
#2: Trust No One

Trust No One is the most psychological game mode in Gimkit.
This mode is all about watching people, guessing their roles, and trying to stay alive when anyone could be the impostor.
If you’ve played Among Us, this will feel familiar.
Some players are impostors, and their job is to secretly eliminate the others.
Everyone else is trying to complete tasks and figure out who the impostors are.
What makes Trust No One interesting is the tension.
You can’t just focus on the questions you need to focus constantly watch who’s near you.
Did they answer a question too slowly?
Are they avoiding eye contact?
Did they just walk past a frozen player without helping?
It’s generally a MIND game.
And when someone calls an emergency meeting, everything explodes.
And People start accusing each other. Everyone’s talking.
The impostors are pretending to be innocent.
And someone is about to get voted out.
The result?
A game that feels less like a classroom activity and more like a full-blown murder mystery.
You’ll find yourself whispering strategies, forming alliances, and trying not to give away your role.
Trust No One forces you to think in a completely different way.
You can’t win just by being smart.
You have to be sneaky.
You have to be persuasive.
And most of all, you have to stay calm under pressure.
#1: The Floor Is Lava

No other Gimkit mode captures chaos like The Floor Is Lava.
This is the most intense, high-pressure game Gimkit has ever created and I’ve ever played.
You spawn on a small platform, the lava starts rising, and your only way to survive is to give correct answers.
Every correct answer builds another platform.
When you stop answering, and the lava catches up.
One mistake, and it’s over.
There’s no break.
No timeouts. Just non-stop action.
The higher you go, the safer you feel until you realize you’re almost out of space, and now you have to make decisions fast.
Should you build sideways?
Should you risk going down for a better position?
Should you try to trap someone else?
All while the lava keeps climbing and your screen starts flashing red.
The pressure gets to everyone. People panic. They rush answers. They make dumb mistakes. And then the lava takes them.
But that’s the magic of this mode.
It forces you to stay sharp. You can’t coast. You have to earn every second you survive.
And when you finally fall into the lava and you will it’s both hilarious and brutal.
The Floor Is Lava is pure Gimkit madness.
It’s a survival game disguised as a quiz.
And it’s the craziest, most intense game mode you can play right now.
Final Thoughts
Each of these game modes brings something wild to the table.
Snowbrawl throws you into a battlefield where knowledge becomes ammo.
Trust No One drops you into a world of deception and suspicion.
And The Floor Is Lava tests how fast and accurate you can be under life-or-death pressure.
But they all have one thing in common: they completely change how you think about learning games.
These aren’t passive experiences. They’re active and intense.
They make you think, move, and strategize all while answering questions that actually help you learn.
If you’re a player, try all three.
Master each one.
Learn the strategies.
Then come back and play again because no two games are ever the same.
And if you’re wondering which one you should try first?
Start with The Floor Is Lava.
Trust me. You won’t forget it.

Hey Bro! I’m David Thapa, Co-founder of Race Code,
And I am interested to write about game guides for Gimkit and Blooket.
I just love these games.
At just 18 years old and hailing from Nepal, I’m passionate about improving gamers’ experiences one guide at a time!
Contact me : davidthapa2065@gmail.com