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Easter Games Kids Will Actually Want to Play All Day

Keeping kids entertained on Easter weekend is its own kind of sport.

The egg hunt lasts about eleven minutes, the chocolate creates a sugar spike that needs somewhere to go, and then there are several more hours of the day left to fill.

I have been on both sides of this — as the kid who ran out of things to do by noon, and as the adult trying to figure out what comes next.

What actually works is having a few games ready that do not require any special equipment, do not need a yard, and work for the specific chaotic energy of a holiday afternoon. Everything below fits those requirements.

Pick three or four, keep the rules simple, and let the kids take it from there.

 

1. Bunny Hop Freeze Dance

Play upbeat music and have kids hop around the room like bunnies. When the music stops, everyone freezes.

Anyone who moves after the music stops has to do a silly bunny action before rejoining — wiggle their nose, hop on one foot, make a bunny face.

The freeze element is what makes this more than just dancing, and the silly consequence keeps younger kids invested even after they are out.

 

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2. Easter Memory Matching 

Print or draw pairs of Easter-themed images on cards — eggs, bunnies, chicks, baskets, carrots — and lay them all face down in a grid.

Kids take turns flipping two cards at a time. Find a match and keep the pair. Miss and turn them back over. Most pairs collected wins.

 

3. Easter Egg Bowling

Line up five to ten empty plastic bottles or cups at one end of the room and roll plastic Easter eggs toward them from a set distance.

Two to three rolls per child per round, one point for every bottle knocked down.

 

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4. Jelly Bean Guessing Game

Fill a large jar with jellybeans before the party and have every child write down or announce their guess for how many are inside. Closest guess wins the jar.

I have run this game with kids as young as four and adults in their fifties in the same room and it works for everyone equally, which is rarer than it sounds.

 

5. Pin the Tail on the Bunny

Draw or print a large bunny and cut out paper tails. Blindfold each child, spin them once, and send them toward the bunny to place their tail as close to the correct spot as possible.

 

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6. Easter Charades

Write Easter-themed prompts on slips of paper — a bunny hopping, an egg hatching, someone eating too much chocolate, hiding an egg somewhere they immediately forget, a chick seeing the world for the first time.

One child acts without speaking and the others guess. The prompts that involve a story rather than just an object tend to produce the most creative performances.

 

7. Roll the Egg Challenge

Kids roll a plastic egg across the room from start to finish using only a spoon or their nose. No hands allowed. First to the finish line wins.

 

8. Bunny Says 

Simon Says with an Easter theme. The host gives commands prefaced with “Bunny says” — hop three times, wiggle your ears, touch your bunny nose. Commands given without “Bunny says” eliminate anyone who follows them.

The key to running this well is keeping the pace fast enough that children do not have time to overthink each command.

 

9. Easter Color Hunt

Call out a pastel color — pink, yellow, lavender, mint green — and kids race to find something in the room that matches before anyone else. No touching each other’s items, no moving things from other rooms.

 

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10. Easter Word Scramble 

Print a sheet of scrambled Easter words — YBUNN, ARESELT, LATHOECOC, KKICC — and race to unscramble them all. First to finish correctly wins.

This works best for slightly older kids who are comfortable reading, but younger ones can participate as a team with an older sibling or adult.

 

11. Follow the Bunny Footprints

Cut out paper bunny footprints before the party and lay them around the house in a trail leading to a small hidden prize.

The trail can go around corners, under tables, into different rooms — the longer and more winding the better, because the anticipation of following something builds in a way that a straightforward “go find the prize” does not.

 

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12. Easter Minute-to-Win-It Challenges

Set a sixty second timer and give each child a task using Easter items. Stack ten plastic eggs as high as possible before they fall. Transfer jellybeans from one bowl to another using only a spoon.

Bounce a plastic egg into a cup from a short distance. Run it as individual rounds so every child gets the same task and the winner of each round earns a point.

 

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13. Easter Trivia Showdown

Prepare a mix of Easter trivia questions calibrated to the ages in the room — easier ones for younger kids, slightly harder ones that require actual thought for older ones. What animal is Easter most associated with.

What color are most Easter eggs traditionally. Where did the Easter Bunny tradition originally come from. Split into teams so younger kids are supported by older ones and keep score across rounds.

 

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14. Indoor Easter Egg Scavenger Hunt

Place a clue inside each egg that leads to the next hiding location rather than hiding all the eggs to be found at once.

Each clue describes the next spot without naming it directly — the place where food stays cold, the spot where everyone sits to watch movies, the room where you brush your teeth. Kids follow the chain of eggs until the final one holds the actual prize.

 

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15. Build-a-Bunny Challenge

Give every child a set of craft supplies — paper, markers, cotton balls, tape, pipe cleaners, anything available — and ten minutes to build the best bunny they can. Award categories for funniest, most creative, and most structurally ambitious.

 

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16. Easter Pictionary

Easter-related words on slips of paper, one player draws while others guess before the timer runs out.

The words that seem easy always produce the most baffling drawings — “Easter basket” sounds simple until someone is trying to communicate it in thirty seconds with a marker and the whole room is guessing increasingly wrong things.

 

17. Egg Drop 

Give each child a collection of simple household materials — paper towels, cardboard, tape, a plastic cup — and a time limit to build something that will protect a plastic egg when dropped from a height.

Once time is up, test each structure by dropping it from a chair or table.

The engineering problem is genuinely engaging for kids who like that kind of challenge, and the drop itself is always dramatic regardless of whether the egg survives.

 

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18. Easter Bingo

Easter-themed bingo cards with images or words — bunny, basket, chocolate egg, chick, carrot, spring flower.

Call out items one at a time and have kids mark their card. First to complete a row calls Bingo and wins a small prize.

 

19. Guess the Bunny 

One child secretly thinks of an Easter-themed item and the others ask yes or no questions to figure out what it is.

Questions can only be answered with yes or no, and there is a limited number of guesses before the round is lost. Whoever guesses correctly goes next.

 

20. Easter Family Talent Show

Kids prepare a short performance — a joke, a dance, a magic trick, a skit, anything they want.

Give them fifteen minutes to prepare and then run the show. This is less a game and more a structured moment that produces the kind of memory a holiday can hinge on.

 

21. Easter Escape Room

Create three to five simple puzzles that have to be solved in sequence to reach a final prize. A word scramble whose answer becomes the code for the next step, which reveals the hiding spot for the egg that contains the prize.

Does not need to be elaborate — kids respond to the chain of solving rather than the complexity of any individual puzzle, and the final reveal lands the same way regardless of how simple the steps were.

 

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22. Easter I Spy Game

A printed or drawn Easter scene filled with hidden items — bunnies, eggs, carrots, flowers, chicks — and a list of how many of each to find.

Kids scan the image and count each item, writing their totals before comparing answers.

 

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23. Super Easter Egg Hunt Board Game

A printable board where kids move along a path collecting eggs and following simple instructions — go back two spaces, skip ahead, collect an extra egg, swap positions with another player.

Kids roll a die and move through the board until someone reaches the end.

 

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24. Follow the Red Eggs Path Game

A grid filled with a mix of images — flowers, butterflies, carrots, green eggs, and red eggs — and kids have to trace a path from one side to the other by moving only through the red eggs. Everything else is a distraction.

It is a logic and visual attention game that looks simple and turns out to require real focus to complete correctly.

 

Three or four of these games, a cleared living room floor, and a group of kids who have already eaten too much chocolate is genuinely all you need for a good Easter afternoon.

The games that work best are always the ones simple enough to explain in under a minute — because once the rules make sense, kids take the chaos from there and produce the afternoon for you.

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