The tool generated mock session tokens to mimic legitimate browser traffic.
They open the developer console (F12 in most browsers) and paste a specially designed JavaScript code snippet.
Exploits can lead to:
During the height of remote and hybrid learning in 2021, students were constantly looking for ways to "troll" or disrupt virtual lessons. The motivations usually fell into three categories:
Short-form video platforms became flooded with tutorials showing students how to "crash their teacher's class." Seeing a lobby overflow with 500 bots named "Sub2Me" or spam emojis became a viral joke, driving massive traffic to GitHub repositories hosting the scripts.
Blooket introduced features allowing teachers to restrict games only to verified student accounts, preventing anonymous, script-driven bots from entering the lobby entirely. The Danger of Using Flooder Tools Today
To understand the threat, let’s analyze a typical script from that era (pseudocode for educational insight):
Before we dive into the Blooket Flooder 2021, let's take a quick look at what Blooket is. Blooket is a popular educational platform that allows teachers to create and share interactive games and activities with their students. The platform is designed to make learning fun and engaging, with a wide range of games and activities that can be tailored to specific subjects and curricula.