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Online Cricket Quiz Player Experience Survey

Measures how players experience your online cricket trivia or prediction quiz — difficulty balance, question variety, rewards, and drop-off points — for quiz app teams and cricket content publishers. An AI follow-up interview reconstructs a specific memorable session to surface what actually made players stay, quit, or come back.

Sample questions

A preview of what’s in the template. Every question is editable before you launch.

13 questions · ~7 min
Q01
Message

Thanks for taking part in our cricket quiz! We'd love your honest feedback on how it feels to play — about 4-5 minutes, and it directly shapes what we build next.

Q02
Multiple ChoiceRequired

In the last 30 days, how often have you played an online cricket quiz?

  • Daily
  • A few times a week
  • Once a week
  • A few times this month
  • Haven't played in the last 30 days
Q03
Multiple ChoiceRequired

Which cricket quiz app or platform do you play most often? (Replace with your own product name and known competitors before launching. Template note: keep the option list specific to your market.)

  • (Your product name)
  • (Competitor A)
  • (Competitor B)
  • (Competitor C)
Q04
Opinion ScaleRequired

Thinking about the last few quizzes you played, how would you rate the overall difficulty?

Scale: 17
Min:Way too easyMax:Way too hard
Q05
MatrixRequired

How much do you agree with each statement about your recent quiz sessions?

5 rows × 5 columns
  • Questions covered a good variety of cricket topics (players, history, rules, stats)
  • The time limit per question felt fair
  • Scores and leaderboard rankings felt accurate
  • The rewards or prizes felt worth the effort
  • The app or site was easy to navigate while playing
Columns: Strongly disagree · Disagree · Neutral · Agree · Strongly agree
Q06
Multiple Choice

What makes you want to play a cricket quiz? Select all that apply.

  • Testing my cricket knowledge
  • Competing with friends or family
  • Winning cash or prizes
  • Passing time during a match
  • Climbing the leaderboard
  • Learning new cricket facts
Q07
Best–Worst Trade-off (MaxDiff)Required

Which of these features matter most to you when choosing a cricket quiz to play?

  • Fresh questions that don't repeat
  • Real cash or prize payouts
  • Live multiplayer matches during real games
  • Adjustable difficulty levels
  • Detailed scoring and stats after each quiz
  • Friends leaderboard
  • Minimal ads or interruptions
  • Fast, snappy question loading
Pick best & worst per setBest:Matters mostWorst:Matters least
Q08
Opinion ScaleRequired

How likely are you to recommend this cricket quiz to another cricket fan?

Scale: 010
Min:Not at all likelyMax:Extremely likely
Q09
AI Interview

Get the respondent to walk through one specific quiz session they remember clearly — ideally their best or worst experience — asking what the questions were about, whether the difficulty and timing felt fair in the moment, and what happened right before they either kept playing or quit. If they mention frustration with question quality, timing, or rewards, probe for the exact moment it happened and what would have changed their mind. If they rated recommendation likelihood low, anchor on what single change would move them to recommend it.

Q10
Number

On average, how many minutes do you spend in a single cricket quiz session?

Q11
Multiple Choice

Which age range do you fall into?

  • Under 18
  • 18-24
  • 25-34
  • 35-44
  • 45-54
  • 55+
  • Prefer not to say
Q12
Multiple Choice

How do you describe your gender?

  • Woman
  • Man
  • Non-binary
  • Prefer to self-describe
  • Prefer not to say
Q13
Message

That's a wicket! Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Your answers will be pooled with other players' feedback to make the quiz fairer, more varied, and more rewarding to play.

What’s included

  • AI follow-ups

    Adaptive probes on open-ended answers that pull out detail a static form would miss.

  • Attention checks

    Built-in safeguards against rushed answers and low-quality respondents.

  • AI-drafted copy

    Wording, ordering, and branching written by the AI — tuned to your research goal.

  • Auto report

    Themes, quotes, and a plain-English summary write themselves once responses come in.

How it compares

We reviewed the closest templates from other survey tools. Here’s what they do well — and where this template goes further.

Why this template

  • Goes beyond a static rating form with an AI follow-up interview that asks the player to walk through one specific quiz session they remember clearly, surfacing the real moments that made them stay, quit, or come back.
  • Combines structured measurement (opinion scales for difficulty and recommendation likelihood, a matrix on session agreement statements, and a max-diff on feature priorities) with open-ended probing in a single flow.
  • Captures behavioral and demographic context (session frequency, platform used, minutes per session, age, gender) alongside experience data so results can be segmented meaningfully.
  • Uses transparent, auto-generated reporting on top of per-response quality scoring, so teams can trust which responses are substantive before acting on the findings.

SurveySparrow

Free Online Cricket Quiz Template

This is a ready-to-field cricket quiz template built on SurveySparrow's conversational form format, making it the most directly comparable offering on this list. It focuses on quiz-style question delivery rather than post-play experience research. There's no indication it captures why players drop off or what makes a session memorable beyond fixed-choice answers.

What it does well

  • Purpose-built for a cricket quiz context, not a generic template repurposed for the topic
  • Conversational, chat-like format that likely feels quick and mobile-friendly for respondents
  • Free to use, lowering the barrier for teams to try it

Where it falls short

  • No adaptive AI follow-up questioning to probe why a player stayed, quit, or came back
  • No published methodology on how questions were designed or scored, unlike a transparent-prompt approach
  • Likely optimized for quiz delivery/scoring rather than structured player-experience research (drop-off points, reward perception, feature trade-offs)

Jotform

Online Quiz Form Template

This is a generic online quiz form template, not one built specifically around cricket trivia or player-experience measurement. It's a fielding-ready starting point that would need heavy customization to capture difficulty balance, rewards perception, or drop-off behavior. Useful as a form builder, but not a research instrument out of the box.

What it does well

  • Highly customizable drag-and-drop form builder with broad question-type support
  • Established platform with integrations (payments, notifications, third-party apps)
  • Easy to adapt for scoring-style quizzes generally, not just cricket

Where it falls short

  • No cricket-specific or player-experience question set — needs to be built from scratch
  • No adaptive AI interview to reconstruct a specific memorable session
  • No automated per-response quality scoring or auto-generated experience reports

Typeform

Online Quiz Form Template

Another generic quiz form template rather than a cricket-specific or player-experience-focused instrument. It emphasizes a polished, one-question-at-a-time respondent experience, which suits quizzes but not deep behavioral research on quitting/return drivers. Would require significant rebuilding to match the depth of a dedicated cricket quiz experience survey.

What it does well

  • Well-regarded conversational UI that keeps completion rates relatively high for short forms
  • Flexible logic and branching for simple quiz paths
  • Clean, mobile-friendly presentation

Where it falls short

  • No cricket quiz or player-experience-specific content — fully generic
  • No adaptive AI-driven follow-up interview to surface qualitative reasons behind ratings
  • No built-in per-response quality scoring or automated experience report generation

Ready to launch?

Open this template in the editor. Every part is yours to change before the first respondent sees it.