If you teach K-12, you’ve likely come across Wayground (formerly Quizizz), a playful learning platform filled with memes, music, points, avatars, self-paced practice, and game-style quizzes. It has become a favorite for both live sessions and homework because students enjoy how easy and fun it is.
Tarphi, on the contrary, is a newer but more comprehensive teaching platform built specifically for daily classroom workflows: Create > Present > Assign > Assess. It blends game-based learning with deeper instructional tools, curriculum-aligned AI authoring, and multiple modes.
This detailed guide compares Tarphi vs Wayground so you can decide which one fits your students, your teaching style, and your school’s needs.
Quick Overview: Tarphi vs Wayground at a Glance
What is Wayground (Quizizz)?
Wayground, previously known as Quizizz, is a popular game-based learning platform used for quizzes, lessons, and homework. Students love it because it feels like a game, with avatars, memes, background music, points, and a fun visual style, not a test.
Wayground is known for:
Live quiz games and self-paced practice
Fun, meme-based student engagement
Quick-to-build lessons, quizzes, and flashcards
Homework assignments with simple settings
Built-in reports showing accuracy and progress
The platform is known for engagement and flexible homework, making it a good companion for class activities, revision, and formative assessment.
What is Tarphi?
Tarphi is a modern K-12 teaching platform that blends game-based engagement with real instructional workflows. Instead of focusing only on quizzes, Tarphi supports the whole cycle of classroom learning: create lessons, teach live, assign work, and track progress, all in one place.
The idea is simple: teachers build activities (manually or with AI), present them like a lesson, switch into a quiz without restarting the session, and then review results with deep, actionable data. Students can learn through slides, practice quietly, or jump into live games depending on the moment.
Tarphi is known for:
Full workflow support: Create > Present > Assign > Assess.
Curriculum-aligned AI that generates grade-level and standards-aligned content.
Multiple learning modes like Presentation Mode, Study Mode, Flashcards Mode, and review games.
Live teaching tools with annotations, effects, and instant quizzes.
Flexible assignments with deadlines, timers, retries, and answer visibility controls.
Deep reporting that highlights accuracy, time, and misconceptions.
1. Activity Creation & Authoring Tools
Wayground: Quick, fun, and flexible with AI
Wayground supports 5 different resource types:
Assessment (MCQ, true/false, open-ended, etc)
Presentation (Slides with questions and whiteboard)
Passage (Question based on passage)
Video
Flashcards

You can create these activities either manually, using templates, or with AI. It also allows you to import slides from PowerPoint, PDF, and Google Slides. And if you prefer, you can also use their built-in content library to get started quickly. Every question can include an answer explanation, turning quizzes into learning opportunities.
Tarphi: Deep Academic Authoring with Smarter AI
With Tarphi, you can create three main activity types:
Quizzes (8 different formats)
Presentation Slides (8 layouts)
Collect Opinion Cards (Live polls, Linear scale)

These diverse question formats cover math, grammar, phonics, comprehension, sequencing, and vocabulary, making it easy to assess students properly. Besides, one standout feature is Tarphi’s answer explanation panel: every question can include a detailed explanation, so students immediately see why an answer is right or wrong.
AI with Classroom-Ready Content
Tarphi AI generates academically aligned, classroom-ready content. You have full control over:
Grade level (K-12)
Curriculum standards (US, UK, AU, International, and more)
Depth of Knowledge (DOK) levels
Bloom’s Taxonomy
Lexile reading levels

These options ensure every AI-generated activity aligns precisely with the lesson’s grade, difficulty, and learning objectives. Wayground’s AI can also generate content quickly, but it lacks advanced options like Bloom’s Taxonomy or Lexile reading level adjustments. As a result, teachers may need to manually refine activities to ensure full curriculum alignment.
Question with GIF Support
Tarphi supports images, GIFs, audio, and video, giving teachers maximum flexibility in lesson creation. Wayground also supports image, audio, and video in lesson creation, but doesn’t support GIFs.
Special Audio Support for Language Teachers
Along with text and image, Tarphi allows audio response too, which is highly useful for phonics, ESL learners, early literacy, and listening comprehension. But Wayground doesn’t offer any kind of audio response options, which limits its interactivity.
Who wins?
Wayground is fast and flexible in lesson creation.
Tarphi is the better choice for K-12 classrooms, offering more curriculum alignment options, deep AI capabilities, and richer media support that truly supports teaching and learning.
2. Activity Modes & Review Games
Wayground Modes in a Nutshell
In Wayground’s live session, teachers can choose two modes:
Teacher-led Mode: Teachers control the pace
Paper Mode: Students submit answers via personalized QR codes.

Student-paced Mode: Students progress at their own speed
Classic Mode: Self-paced with live leaderboard and Strike & Shield player-vs-player features.
Mastery-Peak Mode: Gamified learning with spaced repetition, mini-games, and accuracy goals.
Test Mode: Formal, distraction-free assessments.
Team Mode: Collaborative play where student performance contributes to team scores.

For asynchronous/ homework sessions, teachers choose among:
Practice Mode: Self-paced learning with instant feedback; students can retry questions.
Accuracy Mode: Repeated practice to reach accuracy goals; ideal for mastery.
Testing Mode: Formal assessment; distraction-free for evaluating learning outcomes.
Tarphi: Presentation, Study, Flashcards, Solo & Competitive Games
Tarphi’s modes are designed so teaching, practice, and games all live in the same flow.
Presentation Mode
Presentation Mode is Tarphi’s “live teaching hub.” You can walk through your slides one by one, explain concepts, highlight important text, draw on the screen, or use Read Aloud for accessibility. To keep attention high, you can trigger magic effects like confetti, blur, or curtain call.

The key difference from Wayground is flexibility. At any moment, you can instantly switch into a live quiz using the same activity; no restarting, no new code, no separate mode setup. This makes Presentation Mode feel like a teaching tool with quizzes built in, not just a quiz host with slides on top.
Study Mode
Study Mode is built for quiet, focused practice. Students move through questions using drag-and-drop, touch, and swipe interactions, supported by soft ambient sounds and subtle visual effects (like rain, snow, or particles) that make practice feel calm.

Where Wayground’s game modes lean more toward competition and momentum, Tarphi’s Study Mode is intentionally slower and more reflective. It’s ideal for independent work, test preparation, or students who need extra time and less pressure.
Flashcards Mode
With one click, Tarphi can turn any quiz into a full flashcard deck. Students flip through cards, mark what they know or don’t know, and gradually build mastery over time. It’s perfect for warm-ups, spaced review, or lightweight homework.

Wayground does offer flashcards, but Tarphi’s auto-conversion from any quiz plus mastery tracking makes it easier to continuously reuse the same content across lessons, quizzes, and flashcards without recreating anything.
Solo & Competitive Review Games
Tarphi also includes a library of solo and competitive review games. Students can:
Practice on their own (great for homework).
Join live contests in modes like Classic Play, Squad Battle, or Precision Run.

Each game wraps meaningful content in different mechanics while still respecting answer accuracy and explanations.
Who wins?
Wayground offers a mix of live and self-paced modes for fun and learning.
Tarphi offers a more unified, multi-mode teaching suite, where a single activity can instantly become a live lesson, quiz, study session, flashcard deck, or review game without rebuilding or copying anything.
3. Assignments & Homework
Wayground: Simple and Effective
Wayground allows teachers to:
Assign any assessment or quiz as a self-paced homework session.
Let students complete tasks independently on their devices.
Choose one of three asynchronous modes (Practice, Accuracy, Testing).
Customize session settings such as deadlines, timers, retries, accommodations, and answer visibility.

Tarphi: More Flexible, Teacher-Centered Assignment Controls
Tarphi treats assignments as an extension of your lesson plan, not just a homework switch. You can take any quiz, slide deck, or activity and turn it into homework with very fine-grained control over how students will experience it.
With Tarphi assignments, you can:
Set deadlines so work is paced properly.
Add time limits for certain tasks (or remove pressure when you don’t need them).
Decide whether to show or hide answers after each attempt.
Control the number of attempts allowed (single try, limited retries, or mastery-focused).
Toggle leaderboard visibility on or off, depending on whether you want competition or calm focus.
Let students choose whether they complete the assignment in Study Mode (quiet practice) or Solo Game Mode (more gamified review).

This means the same assignment can look very different depending on your goal: low-stress review, exam-style practice, or game-like reinforcement.
Who wins?
Wayground is a good choice if you mainly want quick, student-paced assessment options.
Tarphi is the better option if you want assignments to feel like part of your instructional strategy with flexible settings, multiple play styles, and deeper insight into how students actually performed.
4. Reports & Data: Depth vs Simplicity
Wayground reporting
Wayground provides:
Automatic reports for every live session or homework assignment.
Shows student scores, accuracy, and completion rates, and correct/incorrect breakdowns.
Provides class-level and question-level performance.

This is great for quick formative checks and communicating progress.
Tarphi reporting
Tarphi’s reports provide you with a complete view of how your students are actually doing. From a single report view, you can:
See a class-level summary of performance at a glance.
Drill down into individual student details.
Review question-by-question accuracy and difficulty.
Track total questions answered across the class.
Compare percentages of correct vs incorrect responses.
View points earned per student.
Analyze average time spent per question.
Spot fastest and slowest response times.
Identify patterns and common misconceptions across the class.

All of this makes Tarphi’s reports feel more like a lightweight analytics dashboard than a scoreboard. Instead of just telling you who “won,” they help you decide:
Which concepts to reteach
Which questions to adjust
Which students need more small-group support
Who wins?
Wayground offers clear reports that are great for quick snapshots of how a quiz or assignment went.
Tarphi gives you deeper instructional analytics that help you make decisions about reteaching, grouping, and pacing.
5. K–12 Pedagogy
Wayground: Fun-first with Some Learning Support
Wayground is designed to make quizzes and lessons feel fun, easy, and motivating. Its use of memes, music, leaderboards, and points encourages students to participate enthusiastically. This makes it great for getting students involved, especially during warm-ups, reviews, or assessments.
From a pedagogy point of view, Wayground does offer some valuable tools. It supports a variety of question types, enables teachers to add answer explanations, and provides real-time reports to help identify misconceptions during or after a session. These features make it useful for formative assessment, which many teachers rely on to make instructional adjustments.
However, the instructional design work still falls heavily on the teacher. While Wayground’s AI lets you select subject, grade, standards, and DOK level, it does not use deeper academic criteria like Bloom’s Taxonomy or Lexile reading levels, which means teachers may need to edit content to ensure appropriate rigor or scaffolding.
Tarphi: Instructional Depth Built Into Every Step
Tarphi approaches pedagogy from a different angle: it assumes teachers need tools that directly support curriculum alignment, differentiated instruction, and meaningful assessment, not just high-energy activities.
When creating activities, teachers can set grade level, curriculum standards, DOK, Bloom’s Taxonomy, and Lexile levels. Tarphi’s AI uses these inputs to generate academically appropriate questions, reducing the need for teachers to rewrite or adjust content after creation. This is a major advantage for curriculum-based planning.
Tarphi also supports answer explanations on every question, shown immediately after responses. This helps students correct misunderstandings in real time, transforming assessments into continuous learning opportunities.
Tarphi’s question formats are also chosen with K–12 instruction in mind, including Match Up, Match Sequence, Word Scramble, and Sentence Scramble. Teachers can assess more than just recall. These formats are especially valuable for literacy, grammar, vocabulary, sequencing, and multi-step reasoning tasks. This makes Tarphi far more adaptable for subject-specific instruction.
Assignments work the same way: you can decide whether answers are shown, how many retries are allowed, whether there’s a timer, and whether a leaderboard appears at all. That lets you design assignments for mastery, low-pressure practice, or summative-style checks whichever best fits your instructional goal.
Finally, Tarphi’s reporting is built like a mini analytics layer: you can view class summaries, question-level performance, time on task, and individual student breakdowns. It’s not just a leaderboard recap; it’s data you can actually use to plan your next small group, reteach a concept, or adjust difficulty.
6. Student Engagement
Wayground: Joyful Chaos, Memes, and Game Energy
Wayground is known for:
Multiple live session modes and asynchronous modes.
Engaging and student-approved with Avatars, memes, and music.
Coins and power-up style mechanics.
Engagement often focuses on speed and staying in the game, not slow thinking or careful reasoning.
Tarphi: Engagement that Flexes with Deep Focus
Tarphi takes a more balanced approach to engagement. Yes, it has live quiz games like Classic Play, Squad Battle, and Precision Run keep things competitive, with points, leaderboards, and all the excitement you’d expect from a game-based platform. But that’s only one layer of how Tarphi keeps students engaged.
During live teaching, Tarphi leans into visual and interactive engagement:
Animated themes with different backgrounds and motion
Magic effects like confetti, blur, bubbles, silence, drumroll, curtain call
Draw tools (pen, marker, highlighter, eraser) so teachers can work things out on screen in real time
These tools give you simple ways to reset attention, celebrate wins, or turn a mini-lecture into something more visual and dynamic without stopping to open another tool or app.
When it’s time to shift gears into quiet practice, Tarphi switches tone completely. In Study Mode and Flashcards Mode, students work through content with:
Ambient sounds (Rain, Forest, Café, etc.)
Visual overlays (rain, snow, particles, bubbles)
Background music tracks
Instead of a countdown timer and pressure to stay on top of the leaderboard, students get an environment that feels calm and focused. That’s ideal for independent work, makeup practice, or students who easily get overwhelmed by constant competition.
So while Wayground is unbeatable for quick, high-energy fun, Tarphi is designed for long-term engagement with learning in a real classroom.
7. Pricing & Plans
Wayground pricing
Wayground follows a tiered pricing structure with three main plans: Basic, Individual (Super), and School/District.
The Basic plan is completely free. It allows you to create assessments, lessons, and flashcards, but storage is limited to just 20 items, and each resource expires after 14 days. Teachers get only 5 question types and 10 AI credits per month. It’s usable for very light classroom needs, but the short expiry and capped storage make it difficult to rely on for ongoing instructional use.
The Individual (Super) plan costs $12/month (billed annually at $144). This plan provides unlimited storage and expiry for assessments, lessons, and flashcards, and unlimited AI credits/month. It also unlocks 18+ question types, including drag-and-drop, hotspot etc. Features like reopening expired assignments, pausing/resuming activities, flexible grading, and adaptive question banks also become available. This tier comes at a relatively high monthly cost compared to other platforms.
For schools or universities, Wayground offers a custom-priced School & District plan. This tier includes all Individual features plus co-teaching tools, summative “Test Mode,” LMS integrations, roster syncing, and school-wide content sharing. It also adds AI Analyze reports, 14 accommodation tools, and comprehensive year-long student progress tracking. While this plan is powerful, the pricing is opaque and typically sits at the higher end of the market.
Overall, Wayground provides strong functionality across its paid tiers, but many essential teaching features, unlimited storage, private content, full question types, unlimited AI, and adaptive question banks start only at the Super plan. This makes the platform noticeably more expensive for individual teachers
Tarphi pricing
Tarphi has three clear pricing plans: Basic (Free), Standard ($7/month or $5/month billed yearly), and Pro ($10/month or $8/month billed yearly). The structure is intentionally simple so teachers know exactly what they’re getting at each tier.
The Basic plan is completely free and allows teachers to create up to five activities, host up to 10 players per live game, use 5 AI generations using text prompts only, and 5 assignments and reports. It’s designed as an introductory tier that helps teachers understand Tarphi’s total workflow without paying for a subscription.
Most teachers find the Standard plan, priced at $7/month or $60/year, to be the sweet spot. This tier unlocks 30 players/session, unlimited activities, unlimited assignments, unlimited reports, unlimited AI generation from text and URLs, leaderboards, read aloud, and private activities. Teachers can also import slides from PDFs, PowerPoints, and Google Slides, modify cards with AI, organize content into folders, and customize lessons with themes and effects. For everyday classroom use, the Standard plan covers nearly everything a teacher needs at a very affordable price.
For those who want full power and maximum flexibility, Tarphi offers the Pro plan, which costs $10/month or $96/year. This plan opens up the entire platform without restrictions: unlimited players for live sessions, full AI generation (from text, documents, and URLs), all collect opinion card types, media uploads in Add Media, Team Mode, custom themes and branding, remote control, draw tools, hints, answer explanations, and adjustable timers and points, remote control, and leaderboard visibility.
For schools, Tarphi provides discounted institutional pricing with two tiers: Standard School ($55/year per seat) and Pro School ($90/year per seat), both requiring a minimum of two seats. School plans include essential administrative features such as multi-seat management, invitation controls, seat limits, and admin dashboards, capabilities that many platforms reserve for expensive enterprise packages.
In short, Tarphi’s pricing is clear, predictable, and significantly more affordable for real classroom workflows. While Wayground’s costs increase quickly once you need more storage, more question types, or more AI capacity, Tarphi delivers the majority of its teaching features at lower, simpler, and more transparent price points.
Which is Better for You: Tarphi or Wayground?
Choosing between Tarphi and Wayground really depends on what you want your classroom to feel like day-to-day. If your main goal is quick, fun engagement with quizzes that feel like games, Wayground is a great fit. Students love the memes, music, avatars, points, and leaderboards, and its live modes plus Practice/Accuracy/Testing homework options make it easy to add low-friction review and self-paced practice to your week. For warm-ups, review days, and homework that feels like a game, Wayground does its job very well.
Tarphi, on the other hand, is built for teachers who want a full teaching workflow, not just a quiz layer. It’s designed around Create > Present > Assign > Assess, with curriculum-aware AI, Presentation Mode for live teaching, Study and Flashcards modes for calm practice, multiple review games, flexible assignments, and deeper analytics. You can align activities by grade level, standards, DOK, Bloom’s, and Lexile, add answer explanations to every question, and then use detailed reports to see who needs what kind of support next.
So if you’re mainly looking for a fun, student-loved practice and quiz platform, Wayground is a strong choice. But if you want one platform where you can create lessons, teach live, run structured assignments, support different learning styles, track data in depth, and still keep things game-based and engaging, Tarphi is the more complete classroom tool. It doesn’t replace the fun; it simply combines that fun with real learning design and everyday teacher productivity.

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