20 Hilarious Easter Party Games for Groups
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The year I was put in charge of organizing Easter for my extended family, I made the mistake of assuming the games would just sort themselves out.
I had the food covered, the decorations up, and then twenty people showed up ranging from six years old to sixty-five and I had absolutely nothing planned for what we were all supposed to do together.
What I learned that afternoon — partly from panic and partly from trial and error — is that the best group games are not the most elaborate ones.
They are the ones with rules simple enough to explain in under a minute, enough chaos built in that things go sideways in funny ways, and some element of unpredictability that keeps everyone paying attention even when it is not their turn.
Everything below works for big families, friend groups, and mixed ages. None of them require significant setup.
Most of them will get someone laughing within the first two minutes, which is the only real benchmark that matters.
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20 Fun Easter Party GamesÂ
1. Bunny Hop Relay
Divide into teams and mark a point at the other end of the room or yard. Players have to hop like a bunny to the point and back, then tag the next teammate.
The rule that makes this game is the restart rule — if anyone breaks into a run at any point, they go back to the beginning.
Watching adults try to maintain a sincere bunny hop while competitive instinct is telling them to just run is one of the funnier things a party can produce. First team to get everyone across wins.
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2. Pass the EggÂ
Everyone sits in a circle and passes a plastic egg around while music plays. When the music stops, whoever is holding the egg is out. Last person remaining wins whatever is inside the egg — candy works well, or a small prize.
The version of this game that works best is when the person controlling the music is genuinely unpredictable about when they stop it.
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3. Easter Charades
Players act out Easter-related prompts while teammates guess within a time limit. The prompts are everything here — generic ones fall flat, specific ones land. The Easter bunny forgetting where he hid all the eggs.
A chick hatching and immediately being disappointed. Someone eating too much candy and immediately regretting it.
The more specific and slightly absurd the prompt, the better the performance tends to be.
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4. Egg Balance Walk
Players balance a hard-boiled or plastic egg on their head and walk from one side of the room to the other. If it falls they go back to the start.
The basic version is already entertaining. Add obstacles — chairs to walk around, a cushion to step over, a narrow corridor to navigate — and it becomes genuinely chaotic.
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5. Would You Rather
A round of Easter-themed Would You Rather questions for the whole group. Everyone picks a side and has to defend their choice before the next question.
Only chocolate for a week or no sweets at all for a year. Hop everywhere you go for a day or crawl everywhere for a day.
Be the person who hides three hundred Easter eggs or the person who has to find all three hundred.
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6. Bunny SaysÂ
Simon Says with an Easter twist. The host gives commands prefaced with “Bunny says” — hop three times, wiggle your ears, touch your bunny nose.
If they give a command without saying “Bunny says” first and a player follows it, that player is out. This works for every age in the room and takes nothing to set up.
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7. Easter Bingo
Give every player a bingo card with squares containing characteristics or facts rather than numbers — “has eaten chocolate before noon today,” “knows what color egg they would decorate,” “can name three Easter songs,” “has given someone a gift basket in the last year.”
Players walk around asking others questions to find someone who matches each square. When they do, that person signs the square. First to complete a row calls Bingo.
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8. Picture Wall Egg Hunt
Before the party, hide eggs around the space and photograph each hiding spot. Print the photos and pin them to a wall. Players search for the eggs using only the photos as clues — no other hints given.
The challenge is that a photo of the inside of a kitchen cabinet or the corner of a bookshelf looks completely different from how you remember the space.
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9. Easter Egg Treasure Hunt
Instead of hiding eggs randomly, place a clue inside each one that leads to the next location. The clue does not name the place directly — it describes it. Something that gets cold and keeps drinks fresh leads to the fridge.
The place you go when you want to be alone leads to a bedroom or bathroom. Teams follow the chain of clues until the final egg, which contains the actual prize.
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10. Easter Bunny Hunt
Print multiple copies of the same Easter bunny image in slightly different sizes or with small differences between them, and hide them throughout the party space.
Players have to find all the hidden bunnies and identify which ones match a specific original image. First player or team to find the correct matches wins.
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11. Don’t Drop the Egg Challenge
Players have to move a plastic egg or balloon from one side of the room to the other without using their hands.
They can use their elbows, their knees, their chin, their shoulder — anything except their hands. Drop it and you restart.
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12. Easter Candy Guessing Game
Fill a large jar with mini chocolate eggs or jellybeans before the party and have every player write down their guess for how many are inside.
Closest guess wins the entire jar.
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13. Bunny Tail Pin Game
A paper bunny on the wall, cotton ball tails on tape, and a blindfold. Each player is blindfolded, spun three times, and then has to walk toward the bunny and place their tail as close to the correct spot as possible.
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14. Easter Egg Bowling
Set up six to ten plastic cups as bowling pins at one end of the room. Players roll a large plastic egg or small ball from a set distance and try to knock them down. One point per cup.
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15. Find the Golden Egg
One gold-painted or distinctly different egg is hidden somewhere in the party space while everyone closes their eyes.
Players search for it. The twist is that when you find it, you do not say anything or react. You just quietly go back to where you were and sit down. The last players still searching are the losers.
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16. Secret BunnyÂ
Everyone writes their name on a piece of paper, folds it, and draws a name at random. That person is your Secret Bunny for the duration of the party.
Your mission is to do three kind or funny things for them without being caught — bring them a snack, leave candy near their seat, compliment them in front of the group, quietly help them win a game.
At the end of the party, everyone guesses who their Secret Bunny was.
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17. Peeps BattleÂ
Line marshmallow Peeps along the edge of a table on each side. Players stand at the opposite end and take turns rolling plastic eggs across the table trying to knock the other person’s Peeps off the edge.
First to knock all the opponent’s Peeps down wins.
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18. Bunny Ears Ring Toss
One player wears a headband with bunny ears and stands at one end of the room. Everyone else stands a few feet away and takes turns tossing rings — paper loops work fine — trying to land them on the ears. Each successful toss earns a point.
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19. Roll-the-Dice Easter Egg Exchange
Everyone sits in a circle holding one filled plastic egg. Players take turns rolling a die and following the instruction for that number — swap with the person on your left, swap with whoever you choose, keep your egg, take from anyone, swap with the person on your right, everyone passes left simultaneously.
When the host calls the final round, whatever egg you are holding is yours to keep.
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20. Easter Egg Roulette
Fill plastic eggs with a mix of candy, small challenges, funny dares, and a few wild card options. Players pick one egg at random and have to do whatever is inside before they can collect their prize.
Keep the challenges light — something embarrassing enough to be funny but easy enough that everyone is willing to do it. The anticipation of not knowing what is inside is what makes this one work.
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You do not need all twenty of these for one afternoon. Pick five or six, make sure at least one gets people moving and at least one runs quietly in the background across the whole party, and let the group take it from there.
 You May Also Like:
• 24 Hilarious Easter Games for Families to Play at Home
• 21 Hilarious Easter Games for Adults at Home
• 24 Fun Easter Games for Kids at Home
•50 Fun Easter Game Ideas for Teens
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