This wikiHow teaches you how to create a working Jeopardy-style game using Microsoft PowerPoint. You can do this on both Windows and Mac versions of PowerPoint. Open PowerPoint. Its app icon resembles a white 'P' on an orange background.
Part 1 of 3:
Creating the Categories Slide

Open PowerPoint. Its app icon resembles a white "P" on an orange background.

Click Blank Presentation. It's in the upper-left side of the PowerPoint window. Doing so opens a new, blank presentation.
Enter your jeopardy game's name. In the "Click to add title" box, type in the name of the game (e.g., "Jeopardy"). You can also enter information about the game in the text box below the title box if you like.
Create a new slide. Click the Insert tab at the top of the PowerPoint window, then click the white New Slide square that's on the far-left side of the Insert toolbar. Doing so will create a new slide and open it for you.
Click the Insert tab. It's near the top of the PowerPoint window.
Click Table. You'll find this option in the far-left side of the Insert toolbar. A drop-down menu will appear.

Create a six-by-six table. In the drop-down menu, position your mouse on a square that is six blocks over and six blocks down, then click the square.

Resize your table. Click and drag the grey sphere at the top of the table up to the top of the slide, then drag the grey sphere that's at the bottom of the table down to the bottom of the slide. The table should now take up the whole slide.
Enter the categories. For each cell in the top row of the table, type in a category's name.
Enter the points. For each category's column, you'll type in the following point values:
Center the table's contents. Click the table, press Ctrl+A (Windows) or ⌘ Command+A (Mac) to highlight the entire table, and press Ctrl+E (Windows) or ⌘ Command+E (Mac) to center everything in your table. Now that you have your "categories" slide set up, you can proceed to creating the clues for each question.
Part 2 of 3:
Creating the Clues
Create 30 new slides. Simply click the New Slide button 30 times to do this.
Enter each question's clue. Select a slide in the left-hand column of slides, then click the text field in the middle of the slide and type in the clue for the question.
Select the "categories" slide. It's in the column of slide previews on the far-left side of the PowerPoint window, though you'll likely have to scroll up to find it. Doing so will re-open the "categories" slide.

Highlight the first category's first question's points. Click and drag your mouse across the "200" text in the table's far-left column to do so.
Click Insert. This option is near the top of the PowerPoint window.
Click Link. It's in the Insert toolbar. A pop-up window will appear.
Click Place in This Document. It's a tab on the left side of the pop-up window.
Select the question's clue slide. Click the text for the clue that belongs to the first question in the first category.

Click OK. It's in the bottom-right corner of the pop-up window. Doing so will create a link from the "200" text to the clue; when you click the "200" text, you'll be taken to the clue's slide.
Go to the clue slide. Hold down Ctrl (or ⌘ Command on a Mac) while clicking 200 to do so.
Create a link from the clue slide back to the "categories" slide. To do this, select the clue slide's text, then click Link or Hyperlink in the toolbar and select the "categories" slide.
Create links for the other clues. Once you've linked every clue back to the "categories" slide, you have a functional Jeopardy game! If you'd like the full Jeopardy experience, however, you can can proceed with making the final two rounds of slides.Part 3 of 3:
Creating Additional Rounds
Create a new six-by-seven "categories" slide. The seventh row in the table will be for the "FINAL JEOPARDY" button.
Select the bottom row of the table. Click and drag your mouse across the bottom row to do so.

Click the Layout tab. It's near the top of the PowerPoint window. This will open the Layout toolbar.

Click Merge Cells. This is an option in the Layout toolbar. Doing so will create one large row at the bottom of the table.

Create the "FINAL JEOPARDY" button. Type FINAL JEOPARDY into the bottom row.

Center everything in the table. Press either Ctrl+A (Windows) or ⌘ Command+A (Mac), then press Ctrl+E or ⌘ Command+E.
Create and link 30 more clue slides. You'll do this using the method from the previous section.
Create and link the "Final Jeopardy" slide. Create one last new slide, then enter the final jeopardy question and link it back to the "FINAL JEOPARDY" text at the bottom of the second "categories" slide.
Save your project. To do so:Update 05 March 2020
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