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A Virtual Icebreaker Game That Doesn't Feel Like One

Share your screen, read a short quote together, and let your team vote: human wisdom or AI imitation? Five minutes, no signup, no awkward forced fun.

Most virtual icebreakers fall flat because they're either childish ("what's your spirit animal?") or they require everyone to install something. Quote or Bot is different: it runs in a browser tab, your team plays through a shared screen, and the game itself starts the conversation. Every quote is a small debate — and every reveal is a small surprise.

app.quoteorbot.com
Who wrote this?

Wisdom grows in the quiet of reflection.

HumanBot

How it works in 30 seconds

1. Share your screen

Open app.quoteorbot.com in a browser tab on Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams. No accounts, no installs, no admin permissions — just a URL.

2. Read the quote out loud

A short, single-screen quote appears with the author hidden. Read it to the room and give everyone 20 seconds to take a position: human or AI?

3. Reveal and discuss

Tap once to reveal the source. Whether it's Marcus Aurelius, GPT-4, or someone in between, you'll have a 60-second conversation no one had to script.

Why it works for remote teams and online meeting hosts

It's a conversation, not a quiz

A 20-word quote is perfectly sized for spoken sharing in a meeting. The 'human or AI?' frame turns it into a game anyone can play without preparation, and gives quieter teammates a low-stakes way in.

Asynchronous-friendly

Hide the author, screenshot the quote card, drop it in Slack or your group chat with 'real or AI?' — the rest of the team plays without ever opening the link. Every share is a tiny social challenge.

Better screen time, not less screen time

Replace the first five minutes of doomscrolling-before-the-meeting with a bounded, intentional micro-experience. Your team comes in curious instead of glazed.

Scenarios where it shines

Monday standup warm-up
Run one round before status updates. Two-minute commitment, three-minute conversation, energy in the room without 'fun-fact roulette'.
New-hire onboarding call
First impressions matter. A shared puzzle is faster than introductions and gives the new person a memorable, non-awkward way to hear teammates argue and laugh.
All-hands or town hall opener
Drop a single quote on screen as people join. By the time the host starts, the room is already discussing — not waiting in silence.

Why most virtual icebreakers fail

Almost every list of 'virtual icebreakers for online meetings' you'll find online has the same problem: the activities require either a download, a signup, or a level of vulnerability nobody asked for on a Tuesday morning. People don't want to roleplay their childhood pet at 9:02 AM.

What actually works is something with a clear, finite rule — a binary decision — and a payoff that doesn't depend on anyone being clever. Wordle proved this for the asynchronous case: one puzzle, one decision, a shareable result. Quote or Bot is the synchronous, screen-shareable equivalent.

What makes a good 5-minute meeting opener

A good icebreaker has four properties: it fits inside five minutes, it gives every participant something to react to (not perform), it produces a reveal moment that's worth a beat of conversation, and it leaves the room slightly sharper than before.

Quote or Bot hits all four. Each round is roughly 60–90 seconds: read, vote, reveal, discuss. The binary nature of the question means there is no 'wrong way to play'. And the reveal — whether the quote came from a 2,000-year-old philosopher or a 2-year-old language model — is naturally interesting in a way 'name your favourite breakfast cereal' will never be.

Works on Zoom, Google Meet, and Microsoft Teams

Because Quote or Bot is a web app at app.quoteorbot.com, it runs anywhere a browser runs. There's no plugin, no admin approval, and no per-participant account. The host shares their screen, and the meeting is the game.

If your company restricts screen-share for certain tools, the alternative is the asynchronous mode: take a screenshot of the quote card, drop it into your Slack or Teams channel, and let the team respond in the thread.

Frequently asked questions