How to host

Your route.
Their adventure.

Build a quiz walk in minutes — AI writes the questions, players follow the map, and you watch the leaderboard grow.

Hosts come in all shapes.

From classrooms to conference rooms to city streets.

Teacher

Anna, 38 · Stockholm

"My class actually wanted to go on the field trip."

Turns any neighbourhood walk into curriculum. History, geography, local science — framed as questions, not lectures.

Built: Old Town history walk · 14 stops

Team Lead

Marcus, 44 · Berlin

"No more awkward icebreaker games."

Runs the company away-day as a city scavenger hunt. Teams compete on a shared leaderboard. The shy developer always wins.

Built: HQ neighbourhood trivia · 8 stops

Tour Guide

Sara, 31 · Edinburgh

"I charge £20 a head. Tipzy handles the format."

Runs paid walking tours. Tipzy does the GPS tracking and quiz engine — she focuses on the stories.

Built: Old Town ghost tour · 22 stops

Party Host

Emma, 27 · Amsterdam

"Twelve people, one adventure, zero planning stress."

Organised a birthday scavenger hunt across her favourite canal streets. Still gets messages about it.

Built: Canal birthday crawl · 10 stops

Business Owner

Pietro, 52 · Rome

"Customers discover things about our street they never knew."

Created a free route around his neighbourhood to drive foot traffic. Players discover his shop naturally at stop 5.

Built: Trastevere food walk · 12 stops

Community Organiser

Ingrid, 45 · Oslo

"Our summer walk is now the thing people ask about first."

Runs the neighbourhood association's annual quiz walk. Different theme every year. Now has a waiting list.

Built: Fjordside neighbourhood walk · 18 stops

200+

Routes published

8,000+

Players inspired

40+

Cities

Step 1 · Create

Place your stops.
AI writes the questions.

Click on the map to add a stop, then pick a question category for it — history, food, architecture, local trivia. AI generates a set of questions. Move to the next stop, repeat. Or hit “Surprise me” and AI plans the whole loop for you first.

Edit anything before you publish, or go live as-is.
A 10-stop route in under 15 minutes.

Step 2 · Test

Walk it from
your kitchen.

Before you invite anyone, use the preview code to play your own route. GPS is bypassed — tap through every stop without leaving your desk. Catch the typos, tweak the order, test the difficulty.

No one else can see preview-mode runs. Your dry-run stays off the leaderboard.

Step 3 · Fix

Nothing is set in stone.

Change a question, move a stop, add a Risk Ticket, swap a category. Every edit goes live immediately — players who haven't reached that stop yet will see the new version.

Edit a question

What year was this gate built

Reorder stops

Market Hall1
Cathedral2
Old Bridge3

Change difficulty

Risk
Safe

Step 4 · Invite

Six characters.
Everyone's in.

Share the sign-in code and players are straight into your route. For bigger events, create a group code — each team gets their own code, the leaderboard shows team-vs-team. Works for classes, departments, corporate cohorts, pub quiz nights.

Step 5 · Print

Put it on a wall.
On a table. In a pocket.

Open Print Studio and choose a template and a theme. The QR code is generated automatically — scanning it takes players straight to the app download.

Templates

  • Pocket flier (4 × A6)
  • A4 poster
  • Table tent (A5)

Themes

  • Field Guide
  • Boarding Pass
  • Postcard

Print at home or send the PDF to a print shop.

Step 6 · Leaderboard

Put it on a screen.
Any screen.

Share tipzy.me/e/ABCD12 and it opens on any browser — no install, no account. Put it on the TV at reception, beam it to a projector, AirPlay it to the screen at the pub. It updates in real time. Every Risk Ticket answered wrong will get a reaction.

Step 7 · Watch it grow

Every play session
adds to your tally.

Your dashboard tracks lifetime totals across all your routes — players inspired, kilometres walked, questions answered, time spent outside. Reset whenever you want a clean slate for a new season.

Watch the numbers grow. Then share them with whoever funded the idea.

The moment it clicks

"You're at the table."

The scoreboard is up on the wall. Your group is halfway through. Team 3 just answered a Risk Ticket wrong and dropped from first to fourth.

Someone groans. Someone else laughs. Two people are already walking faster.

You built this — the questions, the route, the stakes.
They're living it.

What will you build?

Routes work for almost any occasion, venue, or group.

Historic walking tour

Old Town · 90 min · 14 stops

Company team day

HQ neighbourhood · 60 min · 8 stops

School field trip

Science museum area · 45 min · 10 stops

Craft beer crawl

Brewery district · 2 h · 6 stops

Birthday adventure

Favourite streets · 90 min · 12 stops

Local tourism

City highlights · 2 h · 18 stops

Why Tipzy for hosts

Done in minutes

Place stops, pick a category per stop, AI generates the questions. A full 10-stop route in under 15 minutes. You bring the idea; Tipzy does the heavy lifting.

Scales to any group

2 players or 200. Solo walk, team competition, or city-wide event — the same route handles all of them with group codes.

Works everywhere

Any city, any venue, any language. If it has streets and a GPS signal, you can build a route there.

Zero friction for players

No accounts. No setup. Players type your code, pick a name, and they're in. Works with any smartphone.

Good questions.

How long does it take to build a route?

With AI, a 10-stop route takes around 15 minutes. Writing every question yourself takes longer — but you can do it in stages and publish when you're ready.

Do players need an account?

No. Players open the Tipzy app, type your sign-in code, pick a name, and play. No registration. No email. Nothing.

How many people can join?

From 2 to 200 in a single session. Use group codes to split large groups into competing teams — the leaderboard handles team-vs-team automatically.

Can I charge for tickets?

Yes. Tipzy doesn't touch your payments. Sell tickets however you like — Eventbrite, cash, company budget, whatever works. Your pricing, your terms.

What if some people don't have a smartphone?

The game is phone-based, but one phone per pair or small group works fine. Most groups sort this out naturally.

Ready to put your city
on the map?

It's free to build. Publish when you're ready.