Corporate Event Game Templates
Corporate events need activities that work for everyone — not just the extroverts. A well-designed interactive game gives every attendee a role, a goal, and a reason to participate. These templates are built for the specific contexts where companies bring people together.
Conference Networking Game
Duration: Flexible (runs throughout event) | Attendees: 50-500 | Difficulty: Easy
A game that runs alongside a conference or multi-session event. Attendees earn points by visiting exhibitor booths, attending sessions, meeting new people, and completing networking challenges. The game creates an incentive structure that drives the engagement every conference organizer wants.
What is included:
- 15 tasks that integrate with the conference schedule
- Exhibitor booth check-in stations (QR codes at each booth)
- Networking challenges ("Take a photo with someone from a different industry")
- Session attendance verification through location-based QR codes
- Live leaderboard displayed on conference screens
- Prize tiers based on point thresholds
Best for: Industry conferences, trade shows, multi-day corporate events, and any gathering where you want attendees to explore, connect, and engage with the full event program.
Product Launch Challenge
Duration: 30-60 minutes | Attendees: 20-200 | Difficulty: Easy-Medium
A game designed around a new product, service, or initiative. Tasks test knowledge about the product, create buzz through photo challenges, and encourage creative responses that generate shareable content.
What is included:
- 8 tasks focused on product features, benefits, and differentiators
- Quiz questions that educate while entertaining
- Photo challenges with the product or branded materials
- Creative tasks ("Record a 15-second pitch for the product")
- Social sharing prompts
- Manager approval for creative submissions
Best for: Internal product launches, sales kickoffs, partner events, and any situation where you need people to learn about a product while having fun doing it.
Company Anniversary Celebration
Duration: 60-90 minutes | Attendees: 20-300 | Difficulty: Easy
A game that celebrates company history, culture, and milestones. Tasks take teams through the organization's story — from founding moments to recent achievements — creating a shared appreciation for the journey.
What is included:
- 10 tasks spanning the company's history and culture
- Timeline trivia from founding year to present
- Photo challenges at meaningful office locations or with specific colleagues
- "Then and now" comparison tasks
- Employee spotlight challenges (find and photograph colleagues who...)
- Open-ended questions about favorite company memories
Best for: Company anniversaries, milestone celebrations, end-of-year events, and culture-building activities. Works well when combined with a dinner, ceremony, or awards event.
Holiday Party Game
Duration: 30-60 minutes | Attendees: 10-100 | Difficulty: Easy
A seasonal game that transforms a holiday party from awkward mingling into an interactive shared experience. Themed challenges, festive photo ops, and team competition make it the activity people actually remember.
What is included:
- 8 holiday-themed tasks adaptable to any celebration
- Festive photo challenges (best costume, creative decoration, group pose)
- Holiday trivia and cultural questions
- Creative challenges (write a team holiday message, build something from supplies)
- Rapid-fire scoring to keep energy high
- Photo wall for real-time viewing on a party screen
Best for: End-of-year celebrations, seasonal parties, cultural events, and any gathering where you want to replace passive socializing with shared activity. The photo wall projected on a screen becomes the visual centerpiece of the party.
Making It Work at Your Event
Timing matters. Place the game strategically in your event schedule. A networking game can run all day. A product launch game works best right after the announcement. A holiday game should happen before people start leaving.
Use the screens. Project the leaderboard and photo wall on event screens. The visual presence of the game keeps it top of mind even for people who are not actively playing.
Print QR codes big. At events with many people, QR codes need to be visible and scannable from a distance. Print them on stands, banners, or table cards — not small paper slips.
Announce winners. Build a moment at the end of the event to recognize top teams and players. This gives the game a conclusion and ties it into the event program.
Broadcast during the game. Use KedQuest's broadcast feature to send messages to all players — hints, time warnings, bonus challenges, or event logistics updates. This keeps players engaged and informed.
Get Started
Create a free game with up to 10 players and 8 tasks. For full corporate events, paid plans start at $14/month for 30 players. Pro plans support up to 500 attendees with features like AI game generation, analytics, and live broadcasting.
No credit card required. Set up your event game in under 15 minutes.