Teacher Simulator: Exam Time
Kwalee Ltd
Screenshots



About this app
You walk into a pixel classroom with a clipboard and zero patience — that’s the vibe. Teacher Simulator: Exam Time hands you the simple, silly, often stressful job of being the adult in a room of kids who either adore you or plot your downfall (sometimes both). Play sessions loop around pop quizzes, spotting cheaters, grading papers, and diffusing scraps before they turn into full-on hallway drama. How to play: assign a test, watch the room, tap misbehaving students, and decide punishments or praise. Grade stacks of papers, collect daily rewards, upgrade outfits and perks — and if you want fewer ads and a bonus mini-game, there’s a subscription option with a 3-day free trial (weekly or monthly). Subscriptions remove non-optional ads, add a VIP outfit, unlock an Arts & Crafts minigame, and double earnings — decide if that’s worth it to you. Gameplay mechanics are straightforward: timing-based spotting (for cheating), quick-time interventions (for fights), and simple resource management (stamina, coins, upgrades). Visuals are bright and cartoony — not trying to fool anyone into realism, but the animations have personality. The audience? Casual players who like short, punchy sessions with a dash of chaos — parents killing time, teens who enjoy goofy sims, and anyone who once fantasized about school revenge (don’t lie). "Student: 'I didn’t cheat!'" — you say, "Sure you didn't." (Seriously — you’ll catch at least one liar per session.) Pause. Think about whether you want a game that’s cute and repetitive or one with long-term depth. This isn’t an academic sim with hours of lesson-building — it’s more like a chaotic pocket toy that rewards quick decisions and a wicked sense of humor. If you’re after something deep, this may not be it. If you want a noisy little game that makes you laugh, rage a little, and come back tomorrow for daily rewards — then welcome, teacher.
Editor's Review
I played Teacher Simulator: Exam Time over three late nights — yes, the kind where you promise yourself "just one more round" and then your phone dies. I got hooked on the petty joy of catching cheaters (there’s a specific look when you tap the kid red-handed). I grilled through stacks of papers — literally tapped until my thumb ached — and I can tell you the grading feels oddly satisfying. But let’s not sugarcoat it: the loop gets repetitive after an hour. The novelty of break-up-a-fight mini-games fades, and the VIP subscription starts to look tempting (ads are frequent if you don’t subscribe). What I liked: the game has personality. Little animations — kids whispering, dramatic gasps — they land. The mini-games are fun for quick bursts. What I didn’t like: microtransactions can feel pushy. Don’t expect a deep teacher career; it’s not a sim where you build a curriculum. Also — and this annoyed me — some tasks repeat without much variation (so yeah, after a while I found myself zoning out). "Me: 'You’re on detention.' Student: 'But I’m innocent!'" — and you know it’s a lie, because they’re chewing gum. In short: this isn’t high art. It’s not pretending to be. It’s a cheeky, playable pocket game with enough moments that made me laugh and a few that made me groan. If you want a light, cheeky sim to kill time and enjoy tiny victories (and tiny punishments), this is worth a download. If you crave depth and long story arcs, don’t expect miracles.
Pros
- Fast, bite-sized sessions perfect for killing a few minutes between tasks
- Cheater-spotting mechanic is oddly satisfying and rewarding
- Bright, quirky animations give the classroom character and humor
- VIP unlocks (no ads, mini-game, x2 earnings) actually change the pacing
Cons
- Gameplay loop becomes repetitive after extended play
- Subscription feels pushy for core conveniences (ad removal)
- Limited long-term depth — not a full career sim experience
- Ads are frequent unless you pay for VIP
Additional Information
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