Right Price
online

Price Is Right Online

Right Price is built for online hosting: create the pricing rounds, open the host screen, share the display, and let players guess from the room or call. It is a custom online pricing game, not an official show game.

Best for

  • Browser-based hosting
  • Screen share
  • Hybrid groups
  • Fast setup
  • Reusable games

Host setup guide

Timing: Short online games take 15 minutes; full event games take 30 to 45 minutes.

Group size: Works for individual players, teams, classrooms, and work groups.

Setup: Build the game in your browser, preview the prompts, then host from the dashboard.

Example prompts

  • online shower price game
  • Zoom work pricing challenge
  • remote classroom consumer math
  • family video call guessing game
  • hybrid sales training
  • virtual church group game
  • remote birthday party
  • online bridal shower
  • screen-share grocery challenge
  • distance learning budget game
  • distributed team icebreaker
  • online product training

Host tips

  • Explain the scoring rule before the first guess.
  • Use one consistent price source for each game.
  • Mix easy, surprising, and discussion-worthy prices.
  • Let teams talk briefly before locking a guess.
  • Add a short explanation after each reveal so the game teaches or entertains.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Using only obscure items that nobody can reasonably estimate.
  • Making every prompt the same difficulty or price range.
  • Skipping explanations when the price reveal could teach or entertain.
  • Letting rounds drag too long without a timer or guess deadline.
  • Mixing price sources so players cannot tell what counts as the correct answer.

Recommended format for Price Is Right Online

Start with a practice prompt so players understand how guesses, reveals, and scoring work. Then use a short first round built around browser-based hosting and screen share. Keep the middle of the game focused on your strongest examples, such as online shower price game, Zoom work pricing challenge, remote classroom consumer math, before ending with a larger bundle or final pricing round.

A reliable structure is three rounds: an easy warmup, a discussion round, and a final closest-price-wins challenge. The host should introduce each item, give players a clear guess deadline, reveal the correct value, and explain why the answer is useful, surprising, or funny for this audience.

Host checklist

  • Choose 10 to 18 prompts related to Price Is Right online.
  • Use one consistent source for correct prices.
  • Plan around this timing: Short online games take 15 minutes; full event games take 30 to 45 minutes.
  • Set the group format: Works for individual players, teams, classrooms, and work groups.
  • Write one reveal note for every surprising price.
  • Save a bundle estimate for the final round.

Online game flow

The host builds the game, starts the host screen, and runs the room from a browser. Players can be in person, on a video call, or gathered around a shared display. The core loop stays simple: prompt, guess, reveal, score.

Because the game is browser-based, it works especially well for teachers, remote teams, virtual showers, and families who need a fast activity without downloads.

  • Create prompts
  • Open host mode
  • Screen-share or project
  • Collect guesses
  • Reveal prices

Online vs in-person

In person, teams can discuss out loud and write guesses. Online, guesses usually happen in chat or through a team spokesperson. Hybrid groups should use one submission per team so remote players do not get crowded out.

Online games should use clear item names and brief descriptions because players may not see tiny image details on a call.

  • Chat guesses
  • Team spokesperson
  • Hybrid room rules
  • Readable prompts

Frequently asked questions

How do I create this type of pricing game?

Start with a clear audience, choose recognizable items, add correct prices, decide whether closest overall or closest without going over wins, and host the game from a shared screen.

How many items should I include?

Use 8 to 12 items for a short game, 14 to 18 for a normal event, or 20+ when you want a longer activity with multiple rounds and a final bundle.

Should people play individually or in teams?

Use individual play for small groups and teams for classrooms, work events, churches, remote calls, and parties with more than eight players.

What scoring rule works best?

Closest-price-wins is easiest. Closest without going over adds more suspense. You can also give bonus points for exact or very close guesses.

Can I host this online?

Yes. Hosts can screen-share the game, collect guesses verbally or in chat, reveal answers, and update scores from the browser.

Is Right Price affiliated with the original game show brand?

No. Right Price is an independent Price Is Right-style game maker and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the owners of the original game show brand.

Related pages

Right Price is an independent Price Is Right-style game maker and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the owners of the original game show brand.