
For example, if you ask a question about pets, you'll probably want to group "collies" into the same category as "dog". Then you'll need to sort the answers into natural groupings. Ask about twice as many questions as you think you'll need, since some answer sets end up being duds.
Think of good questions and gather all the survey results. have most of the useful sound effects for the game built-in. allow you to mostly-dynamically play Fast Money (aka the final round). allow you to enter in pre-researched survey answers, one question per presentation. What this presentation does and doesn't doīefore I get to the good stuff, let me be clear about what this Family Feud Powerpoint does and doesn't do. By combining AutoHotKey functionality with the Powerpoint tab order, I could do exactly what I wanted! If I press Ctrl-2, I could send Tab-Tab-Enter. In other words, if I press Ctrl-1, I could send a Tab-Enter. AutoHotKey allows you to do things like press one key in order to trigger an entire sequence of keys. That's when I discovered a wonderful little Windows utility called AutoHotKey. If I'd inadvertently miscounted while tabbing, I'd reveal the wrong answer, which would be even more lame than mousing over an answer before triggering it. That was close to what I wanted, but my modified Family Feud board had 11 possible triggers. If I hit Tab-Tab-Enter, it will select the second trigger.
In other words, if I hit Tab-Enter, it will select the first trigger. It turns out that while Powerpoint can't trigger events using shortcut keys, there IS a "tab order" that cycles through all triggers one at a time, based on their ordering in the Animation Pane.