If you want an Easter party that’s actually fun for kids, teens, and adults, the secret is having a few easy games ready to go, ones that don’t need complicated setup but still feel festive.
Start by grabbing a pack of plastic Easter eggs because you can use them for a surprising number of games on this list.
1. Bunny Tail Egg Relay

A hilarious relay where players “carry” an egg like a bunny tail without using their hands.
Supplies
- 12 plastic Easter eggs
- 1 roll painter’s tape (finish line)
- 1 stopwatch timer
Directions
- Use painter’s tape to mark a start line and a finish line across the room or yard.
- Divide everyone into two teams and line them up behind the start line.
- Give the first player on each team one plastic egg.
- Players place the egg between their knees (or gently pinch it behind them like a “bunny tail”).
- Start the race using a timer and have players hop to the finish line and back.
- If the egg drops, the player must stop, pick it up, and restart from the spot where it fell.
- Tag the next teammate and continue until everyone has gone—fastest team wins.
2. Egg and Spoon Zigzag Dash

A classic Easter race with a twist—set up a zigzag path for extra chaos and laughs.
Supplies
- 24 plastic Easter eggs
- 24 plastic spoons
- 10 small cones (or cups)
- 1 roll painter’s tape
Directions
- Set up a zigzag course by spacing small cones in a line with gaps between them.
- Mark a start and finish using painter’s tape.
- Give each player a spoon and a plastic egg.
- Players balance the egg on the spoon and weave through the cones without dropping it.
- If an egg falls, the player returns to the last cone they passed and continues from there.
- Run it as a single race, or do heats and a final round for a “championship.”
3. Jelly Bean Guess Jar Challenge

Everyone guesses how many jelly beans are in the jar—closest guess wins.
Supplies
- 1 clear jar with lid
- 1 bag jelly beans
- 1 pack index cards
- 2 black markers
- 1 small basket (for guesses)
Directions
- Fill a clear jar with jelly beans and keep track of the exact number for later.
- Set the jar in a high-traffic spot where everyone can look closely without opening it.
- Place index cards and markers next to the jar.
- Have each person write their name and guess, then fold the card and drop it into a basket.
- At the end of the party, read guesses aloud and reveal the real number.
- Award a small prize (or the jar of jelly beans) to the closest guess.
4. Bunny Hop Musical Circles

Musical chairs, but with bunny hopping—and everyone plays until the end with silly “dares.”
Supplies
- 1 Bluetooth speaker
- 1 roll painter’s tape (circle spots)
- 1 pack Easter temporary tattoos (mini prizes)
Directions
- Use painter’s tape to create big circles (or squares) on the floor—one spot per player.
- Play music from a Bluetooth speaker while everyone bunny-hops around the outside of the taped spots.
- When the music stops, players must hop onto a taped spot as fast as they can.
- Instead of eliminating people, the last person to land does a silly Easter action (flap like a chick, hop like a bunny, etc.).
- After 3–5 rounds, hand out tiny prizes like Easter tattoos to everyone who completed a “dare.”
5. Egg Pop Balloon Hunt

Hide balloons with “egg surprises” inside—pop one to reveal a challenge or prize.
Supplies
- 24 balloons
- 24 small prize toys
- 24 slips of paper (challenge notes)
- 1 balloon pump
Directions
- Write simple Easter challenges on small slips of paper (example: “do 5 bunny hops,” “sing a silly spring song,” “find something yellow”).
- Put one challenge slip (and optionally a tiny prize toy) into each balloon before inflating.
- Inflate balloons using a balloon pump and tie them off.
- Hide balloons around the party space like a giant Easter hunt.
- Let each player find one balloon, then pop it (outside is best) and complete the challenge inside.
- Keep going until everyone has popped at least one balloon.
6. Egg Toss Friendship Tournament

A gentle egg toss game using plastic eggs—partners take one step back each round.
Supplies
- 12 plastic Easter eggs
- 1 roll painter’s tape
- 1 whistle (optional)
Directions
- Pair players up and have each pair stand facing each other, about 3 feet apart.
- Give each pair one plastic egg.
- On your signal (or a quick whistle), they toss the egg back and forth.
- After 5 successful tosses, both players take one step back (mark steps with tape if you want it neat).
- If the egg drops, the pair is “out” or they restart from the closest tape line (your choice depending on ages).
- Continue until one pair is left standing as the champions.
7. Bunny Trail Scavenger Hunt

A clue-based hunt with a “bunny trail” of cotton balls leading to the final prize.
Supplies
- 1 bag cotton balls
- 12 sheets index cards (clues)
- 1 pack colored markers
- 1 Easter basket (final prize)
Directions
- Write 6–10 simple clues on index cards using colored markers (example: “Look where shoes sleep”).
- Hide each clue at the location described by the previous clue.
- Place small “bunny tail puffs” of cotton balls on the floor leading toward the next clue spot.
- At the final clue, hide a prize in an Easter basket.
- Give the first clue to the group and let them follow the bunny trail together.
- For competitive play, make two trails and run two teams at once.
8. Peep Stack Attack

Players race to stack marshmallow Peeps into a tower before time runs out.
Supplies
- 4 packs Peeps marshmallows
- 24 paper plates
- 1 stopwatch timer
- 24 disposable gloves (optional)
Directions
- Give each player a paper plate with 6–8 Peeps on it.
- If you want less sticky hands, hand out disposable gloves.
- Set a time limit on a timer (60–90 seconds is perfect).
- Players stack Peeps into the tallest free-standing tower they can build.
- When time is up, measure towers by counting Peeps or using the tallest height.
- For older players, add a rule: no leaning against anything and must use only one hand.
9. Easter Bingo Bonanza

Printable bingo with Easter icons—easy for all ages and great for mixed groups.
Supplies
- 1 pack Easter bingo cards
- 1 bag bingo markers
- 1 bag wrapped Easter candy (prizes)
- 1 small prize basket
Directions
- Hand out Easter bingo cards and a small pile of bingo markers to each player.
- Use the call sheet that comes with the set, or call out pictures and words loudly for little kids.
- When someone gets bingo, have them call it out and show their card for a quick check.
- Give winners a few pieces of wrapped candy from the prize basket.
- Play multiple rounds and switch prize types (one line, blackout, four corners) to keep it exciting.
10. Bunny Ears Ring Toss

Toss rings onto “bunny ears” for points—super easy to set up indoors or out.
Supplies
- 1 set ring toss set
- 1 sheet foam board (optional bunny ears)
- 1 hot glue gun (optional)
- 1 pack pastel pipe cleaners (ears)
Directions
- Set up a ring toss set on a table or the ground.
- If you want a bunny theme, cut tall ear shapes from foam board and outline them with pastel pipe cleaners.
- Attach ears behind the pegs using a hot glue gun so they look like “bunny heads.”
- Mark a throwing line and let each player toss 3–5 rings per turn.
- Assign points based on which peg they land on, and play to a set score.
11. Golden Egg Mystery Swap

Players hunt for eggs, but one golden egg triggers a funny swap challenge.
Supplies
- 36 plastic Easter eggs
- 1 pack gold plastic eggs (or one gold egg)
- 36 small prize toys or treats
- 20 sheets index cards (challenge slips)
- 1 black marker
Directions
- Write quick “swap challenges” on index cards (example: “swap eggs with the person wearing stripes”).
- Fill regular plastic eggs with small treats or tiny prizes.
- Put the challenge slips inside the gold egg (or one special golden egg).
- Hide all eggs around the space and let players hunt for a set amount of time.
- When time is up, whoever found the gold egg must read the challenge out loud and complete it.
- Then everyone opens eggs at the same time for the final surprise.
12. Carrot Crunch Bowling

Turn empty bottles into bowling pins and roll a “carrot ball” to knock them down.
Supplies
- 10 plastic bottles (or reusable bottles)
- 1 orange ball
- 1 roll green crepe paper (carrot top)
- 1 roll painter’s tape
Directions
- Set up 10 plastic bottles like bowling pins in a triangle.
- Use painter’s tape to mark a rolling line.
- Turn an orange ball into a “carrot” by taping on strips of green crepe paper at one end.
- Each player rolls twice per frame like real bowling.
- Keep score simply: 1 point per pin knocked down, or do full bowling scoring for older kids/adults.
13. Egg Carton Color Match Race

A fast-paced color sorting game that’s great for little kids and still fun for older players.
Supplies
- 6 egg cartons
- 48 plastic Easter eggs (mixed colors)
- 1 set colored dot stickers
- 1 stopwatch timer
Directions
- Place colored dot stickers inside the cups of each egg carton to create a color pattern (repeat colors if needed).
- Dump a pile of mixed plastic eggs in the center of the table.
- On “go,” players race to place eggs into the matching colored spots in their carton.
- Time each player using a timer, or have everyone race at once and the first to finish wins.
- For older players, require them to open each egg and place the halves separately to slow it down and add challenge.
14. Bunny Nose Cup Stack

Stack cups into a pyramid, then unstack them into one tall tower—fastest time wins.
Supplies
- 24 pink plastic cups
- 1 stopwatch timer
- 1 plastic table cover (optional)
Directions
- If playing indoors, protect the surface with a plastic table cover.
- Give each player a stack of 12 pink cups (bunny nose color).
- Start the timer and have them build a pyramid (4-3-2-1).
- As soon as the pyramid is complete, they must unstack and restack into one tall tower.
- Stop the timer when the tower is finished and record times.
- Run a second round and let players try to beat their own score.
15. Easter Egg Put-Put

Make a mini “golf” course and putt plastic eggs into baskets or cups.
Supplies
- 12 plastic Easter eggs
- 2 mini golf putters (or toy clubs)
- 6 small baskets (holes)
- 1 roll painter’s tape (course lines)
Directions
- Use painter’s tape to create simple fairway lines and “tee” spots on the floor or patio.
- Place small baskets at the end of each lane as the hole.
- Players use mini putters to tap a plastic egg down the lane.
- Count strokes until the egg lands inside the basket.
- Make it harder by adding tape “hazards” players must avoid touching.
16. Chick Walk Balance Challenge

Players walk with a beanbag “egg” on their head—no hands allowed.
Supplies
- 12 bean bags
- 1 roll painter’s tape
- 1 stopwatch timer
Directions
- Use tape to mark a start and finish line.
- Give each player one bean bag and have them place it on their head like an “egg.”
- Start the timer and let them walk to the finish and back.
- If the bean bag falls, they must stop, reset it, and continue.
- Fastest time wins, or run it as a relay for teams.
17. Easter Minute-to-Win-It Egg Flip

Players flip plastic eggs from the back of their hand into a bowl—sounds easy, gets competitive fast.
Supplies
Directions
- Place one mixing bowl on a table for each player (or one shared bowl if taking turns).
- Put a pile of plastic eggs in front of them.
- Set a 60-second timer.
- Players place an egg on the back of their hand and flick it upward, trying to land it into the bowl.
- They can keep flipping eggs until the timer ends—count how many made it in.
- For younger kids, let them toss normally but require a “bunny hop” between each toss.
18. Bunny Basket Beanbag Toss

Throw beanbags into baskets labeled with points—simple, classic, and fun for everyone.
Supplies
- 6 small baskets
- 12 bean bags
- 1 pack number stickers
- 1 roll painter’s tape
Directions
- Place baskets at different distances (close, medium, far).
- Label baskets with points using number stickers (example: 5, 10, 15).
- Mark a throwing line with painter’s tape.
- Each player tosses 5 bean bags and adds up their score.
- Play 3 rounds and crown the highest total as the bunny basket champion.
19. Egg Hunt Photo Mission

A modern Easter hunt where teams take fun photos completing silly spring missions.
Supplies
- 10 sheets index cards
- 1 pack colored markers
- 1 small prize pack
- 2 clipboards (optional)
Directions
- Write photo missions on index cards using markers (example: “Take a photo with something pink,” “Make a bunny face selfie”).
- Split players into teams and hand each team a mission stack (use clipboards if you want it tidy).
- Set a 15-minute time limit and have teams complete as many missions as possible using their phone camera.
- When time’s up, teams show their photos as proof.
- Award small prizes from a prize pack for most completed, funniest photo, and best team spirit.
20. Carrot Hunt Hot-and-Cold

One hidden “carrot” while the group plays hot-and-cold—great for toddlers through adults.
Supplies
- 1 stuffed carrot toy (or orange ball)
- 1 Bluetooth speaker (optional music)
- 1 pack Easter stickers (prize)
Directions
- Choose one player to be the “bunny” (the seeker) and have them close their eyes or leave the room.
- Hide the stuffed carrot somewhere visible but not obvious.
- The bunny returns and starts searching while everyone calls “cold,” “warmer,” and “hot.”
- For extra fun, play light music from a speaker and turn it louder when they’re close, quieter when they’re far.
- Whoever finds the carrot wins a small prize like Easter stickers and becomes the next bunny.
21. Egg Crack Surprise Draw

Each egg contains a funny action—players open one and must do what it says.
Supplies
- 36 plastic Easter eggs
- 30 sheets index cards
- 1 colored marker set
- 1 Easter basket
Directions
- Write quick actions on index cards using markers (example: “Hop like a bunny to the kitchen and back”).
- Fold the slips and place one inside each plastic egg.
- Put all eggs in an Easter basket.
- Players take turns selecting an egg, opening it, and reading their action out loud.
- Everyone cheers them on while they complete the action, then the next player goes.
- For older groups, add a “trade your egg” card for extra strategy.
22. Bunny Burrow Blanket Crawl

Create a “bunny burrow tunnel” and race through it—great for kids but funny for adults too.
Supplies
- 4 folding chairs
- 2 blankets
- 1 roll painter’s tape (start/finish)
- 1 stopwatch timer
Directions
- Set up two rows of chairs facing each other, leaving a “tunnel” gap in the middle.
- Drape blankets over the chairs to create a covered bunny burrow tunnel.
- Mark start and finish lines with painter’s tape.
- Players crawl through the tunnel as fast as they can while you time them with a timer.
- For older players, require them to carry a plastic egg without dropping it while crawling.
23. Egg Roll Obstacle Course

Players roll an egg through an obstacle course using only a spoon—no hands touching the egg.
Supplies
- 12 plastic Easter eggs
- 12 wooden spoons
- 10 small cones
- 1 roll painter’s tape
Directions
- Create a winding course with cones and mark the start/finish with painter’s tape.
- Give each player a wooden spoon and one plastic egg.
- Players must roll the egg on the ground using only the spoon, weaving through the cones.
- If the egg goes off course or gets stuck, they can reposition it using the spoon only.
- Fastest time wins, or do it relay-style for teams.
24. Bunny Ears Headband Freeze Tag

Freeze tag, but the “it” player wears bunny ears and can only tag while hopping.
Supplies
- 1 bunny ears headband
- 1 stopwatch timer
- 1 pack Easter stickers (optional prizes)
Directions
- Pick one player to be “it” and give them the bunny ears headband.
- Set a round length (5 minutes works great) using a timer.
- When the round starts, “it” must hop like a bunny while chasing other players.
- When someone is tagged, they freeze in place.
- Frozen players can be unfrozen if another player gently hops around them in a circle three times.
- At the end, if anyone is still frozen, “it” wins—and you can hand out Easter stickers just for playing.
25. Easter Egg Code Breakers

Plastic eggs hide clues—players solve a simple code to unlock the final message and prize.
Supplies
- 24 plastic Easter eggs
- 24 slips of paper
- 1 pack colored markers
- 1 small lock box (or taped-up prize box)
- 1 Easter candy assortment (final prize)
Directions
- Create a simple code like “each egg contains one number, and the numbers in order make the lock code.”
- Write numbers or short clue fragments on slips of paper using markers.
- Place one clue slip inside each plastic egg and hide the eggs around the room or yard.
- Lock the final prize inside a lock box (or tape a box shut and write “Do not open until the code is solved”).
- Players hunt for eggs, bring them back, open them, and work together to put the code in the correct order.
- Once they solve the code, open the prize box and share the Easter candy.
26. Bunny Tail Pin the Puff

A cute Easter spin on “pin the tail” where players try to stick a fluffy bunny tail in the right spot.
Supplies
- 1 sheet white poster board
- 1 pack cotton balls
- 1 roll double-sided tape
- 1 pack colored markers
- 1 blindfold
Directions
- Draw a big bunny outline on poster board using markers, leaving a blank “tail spot.”
- Turn each cotton ball into a tail by adding a small loop of double-sided tape on the back.
- Hang the bunny poster on a wall at kid-friendly height.
- Blindfold the first player with a blindfold and gently spin them once or twice.
- Hand them a cotton tail and let them stick it on the bunny.
- Mark each tail with the player’s initials using a marker and award the closest tail to the correct spot.
27. Bunny Tag With Egg Shields

Classic tag, but players can “block” a tag by holding up a plastic egg like a shield.
Supplies
- 24 plastic Easter eggs
- 1 bunny ears headband (for “it”)
- 1 stopwatch timer
Directions
- Choose one player to be “it” and give them the bunny ears headband.
- Give every other player one plastic egg to hold in their hand.
- Set a round for 3–5 minutes using a timer.
- When “it” tries to tag someone, that person can block one tag by holding the egg up like a shield.
- After using their shield once, they must hand their egg to “it” (so “it” slowly gets faster and more powerful).
- At the end of the round, whoever has the most eggs becomes the next “it.”
28. Egg Stack Balance Battle

Players try to stack eggs into the tallest tower without them falling—simple, surprisingly intense.
Supplies
Directions
- Give each player a paper plate as their “building base.”
- Place a shared pile of plastic eggs in the center (or give each player 8–10 eggs).
- Set a 2-minute build window using a timer.
- Players stack eggs (closed or open halves—your choice) into the tallest tower possible.
- When time ends, players must take one step back and hands off—anything that falls after time still counts as fallen.
- Measure by counting how many eggs are still stacked or by height; highest stable tower wins.
29. Bunny Hop Sack Race

A classic sack race, Easter-style—kids and adults will both end up laughing.
Supplies
- 10 burlap race sacks
- 1 roll painter’s tape (lines)
- 1 whistle
Directions
- Mark a start and finish line using painter’s tape.
- Have racers step into race sacks and hold the top edge at their hips.
- On the whistle, players hop like bunnies to the finish line.
- Run heats based on age so little kids aren’t racing adults unless they want to.
- For an extra twist, have racers carry a plastic egg in one hand while hopping.
30. Easter Egg Memory Match

Open eggs to find matching pairs—like a memory game, but way more fun to play on the floor.
Supplies
- 24 plastic Easter eggs
- 12 pairs of small items mini erasers (or toys)
- 1 plastic table cover (optional play mat)
Directions
- If you’re playing indoors, spread a plastic table cover on the floor as a clean play area.
- Put matching pairs of small items (like mini erasers) inside eggs and close them.
- Mix the eggs up and scatter them closed-side up.
- Players take turns opening two eggs to see what’s inside.
- If they match, the player keeps the pair and goes again; if not, close eggs and put them back in the same spots.
- When all pairs are found, the player with the most matches wins.
31. Bunny Whisker Drawing Contest

Players draw a bunny face on a paper plate—best whiskers, silliest bunny, and cutest ears win.
Supplies
- 24 paper plates
- 1 pack washable markers
- 1 bag cotton balls
- 1 bottle school glue
- 1 pack Easter stickers (optional)
Directions
- Give each player a paper plate and washable markers.
- Have them draw a bunny face with big eyes, a nose, and long whiskers.
- Glue on a cotton ball tail or fluffy cheeks using school glue.
- Add extra flair with Easter stickers if you want it extra festive.
- Let everyone vote for funniest, cutest, and most creative (no voting for your own).
32. Egg Dice Roll-Off

Roll dice and collect eggs based on what you roll—easy, quick, and perfect between bigger games.
Supplies
- 2 large dice
- 40 plastic Easter eggs
- 1 small basket (egg bank)
Directions
- Put all plastic eggs in a basket in the middle.
- Players take turns rolling large dice.
- They collect that many eggs from the basket (example: roll a 7, take 7 eggs).
- When eggs run out, players open their collected eggs (fill them with candy or tickets ahead of time if you want).
- Optional twist: roll doubles and you can steal one egg from any player.
33. Bunny Ears Charades

Charades with Easter-only prompts—cute, silly, and easy for all ages.
Supplies
- 30 sheets index cards
- 1 colored marker set
- 1 bunny ears headband (for the actor)
- 1 1-minute sand timer
Directions
- Write Easter prompts on index cards with markers (examples: “hatching chick,” “painting eggs,” “bunny hopping”).
- Divide players into two teams and set a playing area.
- The acting player wears the bunny ears to make it extra funny.
- Flip a 1-minute timer and let the team guess.
- Correct guess within time = 1 point; play to 10 points.
34. Egg Drop Target Toss

Toss eggs into point zones—like cornhole, but Easter themed.
Supplies
- 12 bean bags
- 1 sheet poster board
- 1 pack number stickers
- 1 roll painter’s tape
Directions
- Use poster board to create a target with 3–5 zones (draw big egg shapes).
- Label each zone with number stickers for points.
- Tape the target to the floor with painter’s tape so it doesn’t slide.
- Players toss bean bags from a marked line and score points based on where they land.
- Play 3 rounds and total the scores for a winner.
35. Bunny Basket Shuffle

Like shuffleboard, but you slide eggs into baskets with different point values.
Supplies
- 24 plastic Easter eggs
- 4 small baskets
- 1 roll painter’s tape
- 1 pack number stickers
Directions
- Create a long “shuffle lane” on the floor using painter’s tape.
- Place baskets at the end of the lane and label them with points using stickers.
- Players gently slide a plastic egg down the lane, trying to land it in the highest-point basket.
- Each player gets 5 slides per round.
- Play 3 rounds and total scores; highest wins.
36. Bunny Tail Paper Airplane Launch

Make “bunny tail” paper planes and see who can land closest to the target.
Supplies
- 50 sheets colored paper
- 1 bag cotton balls
- 1 roll glue dots
- 1 hula hoop (target)
Directions
- Give each player one sheet of colored paper to fold into a paper airplane (simple designs work best).
- Attach a cotton ball “tail” to the back using glue dots.
- Place a hula hoop on the floor as the landing target.
- Players take turns launching their bunny planes from a set line.
- Score points for landing inside the hoop or closest to it.
37. Easter Egg Bowling With Pins

Roll eggs to knock down pins—easy indoors, and you can reset fast for big groups.
Supplies
- 1 set kids bowling pins
- 12 plastic Easter eggs (as balls)
- 1 roll painter’s tape
Directions
- Set up bowling pins in a triangle.
- Mark a rolling line with painter’s tape.
- Players roll a plastic egg (closed) toward the pins.
- Count pins knocked down and play 5 frames per person, or rotate quickly for big groups.
- For older players, require a “trick roll” like rolling backwards between legs.
38. Bunny Hop Simon Says

Simon Says, but every action is Easter-themed—perfect for mixed ages and little kids.
Supplies
- 1 whistle (optional)
- 1 pack Easter temporary tattoos (prizes)
Directions
- Choose a leader (Simon) and have players spread out with room to move.
- Simon gives Easter commands like “bunny hop,” “flap like a chick,” “wiggle your bunny nose,” or “freeze like a chocolate bunny.”
- Players only do the action if Simon starts with “Simon says.”
- Instead of eliminating players, give a fun “oops” consequence (do 3 hops) and keep everyone in.
- Hand out tiny prizes like temporary tattoos after a few rounds.
39. Egg Balance Spoon Juggle

Players try to carry two eggs at once—one on a spoon, one on the back of the other hand.
Supplies
- 24 plastic Easter eggs
- 12 plastic spoons
- 1 roll painter’s tape
- 1 stopwatch timer
Directions
- Mark a start and finish with tape.
- Give each player a spoon with one egg balanced on it.
- Place a second egg on the back of their free hand.
- Start the timer and have them walk the course without dropping either egg.
- If one drops, they must stop, reset both eggs, and continue.
- Fastest time wins, or do it as a team relay.
40. Bunny Basket Basketball

Toss soft balls into baskets at different distances—easy to scale for all ages.
Supplies
- 5 small baskets
- 10 soft foam balls
- 1 pack number stickers
- 1 roll painter’s tape
Directions
- Set baskets on the floor in a row, spaced by distance (closest = easiest).
- Label baskets with points using number stickers.
- Mark a throwing line with painter’s tape and give each player 5 foam balls.
- Players toss and add points for each ball that lands in a basket.
- Play multiple rounds and let kids move closer while adults must stay at the line.
41. Easter Egg “Fishing” Pond

Make a simple fishing game where players “catch” eggs with a magnet rod—adorable for kids, nostalgic for adults.
Supplies
- 24 plastic Easter eggs
- 1 pack small magnets
- 1 string
- 6 wooden dowels (fishing rods)
- 1 blue plastic tablecloth (pond)
- 1 hot glue gun
Directions
- Spread a blue plastic tablecloth on the floor as your “pond.”
- Hot-glue a small magnet inside the top of each plastic egg half (or tape it securely).
- Tie a length of string to a wooden dowel and attach a magnet to the string end to create a fishing rod.
- Scatter eggs on the “pond” and let players fish for a set time.
- Add numbers inside eggs for points, or small prizes for kids.
42. Bunny Tail Trivia Sprint

Answer an Easter trivia question, then sprint to grab an egg—first correct answer gets the point.
Supplies
- 30 sheets index cards
- 1 black marker
- 30 plastic Easter eggs
- 1 small basket
Directions
- Write Easter trivia questions on index cards using a marker.
- Place a pile of plastic eggs in a basket across the room.
- Split into two teams and have one player from each team stand at the start line.
- Read a trivia question; the first player to shout the correct answer runs to grab an egg.
- Team with the most eggs after 10–15 questions wins.
43. Egg Hunt “Trade Up” Market

Players hunt eggs, then “trade up” at a mini prize market for bigger rewards.
Supplies
- 60 plastic Easter eggs
- 1 pack raffle tickets (egg currency)
- 1 set small prize toys
- 1 set medium prize assortment
- 2 plastic tablecloths (market tables)
Directions
- Put 1–3 raffle tickets inside each plastic egg and hide eggs around the space.
- Set up a “prize market” table covered with a plastic tablecloth, displaying small prizes and bigger prizes.
- Assign ticket costs (example: 2 tickets for small, 6 tickets for medium).
- After the hunt, players count their tickets and decide how to spend them.
- Let players trade tickets with each other to “trade up,” then cash in at the market.
44. Bunny Hop Dance-Off

A quick dance competition where each round adds a bunny hop move—funny for all ages.
Supplies
- 1 Bluetooth speaker
- 1 pack bunny ears headbands (optional)
- 1 pack mini prize medals (optional)
Directions
- Play upbeat music from a Bluetooth speaker and clear a dance space.
- Optional: hand out bunny ears to a few players so it looks extra festive.
- Start with 30 seconds of freestyle dancing.
- Each new round, call out a required move (bunny hop, chicken flap, egg roll on the floor, etc.).
- At the end, let the group vote for funniest, most energetic, and best bunny hop—award mini medals if you want a cute finish.
45. Egg Relay With Costume Pieces

A relay where each teammate adds a silly Easter costume piece before running their leg.
Supplies
- 1 set bunny ears headbands
- 1 pack pastel feather boas
- 1 pack funny sunglasses
- 12 plastic Easter eggs
- 1 roll painter’s tape
Directions
- Mark start/finish lines with painter’s tape.
- Place costume items at the start: bunny ears, a pastel boa, and funny sunglasses.
- Each runner must carry a plastic egg to the finish and back.
- Before running, they must put on one costume item (first runner puts on ears, second adds boa, third adds sunglasses, etc.).
- When they return, they hand the egg to the next teammate and the costume stays on, stacking up into a ridiculous outfit.
- First team to finish wins, and best “final outfit” gets a bonus point.
46. Easter Egg Word Scramble Race

Teams hunt eggs that each contain a letter—first to unscramble the Easter word wins.
Supplies
- 24 plastic Easter eggs
- 24 slips of paper
- 1 pack black markers
- 2 clipboards
Directions
- Choose 2–3 Easter words (examples: BUNNY, SPRING, CHICK) and write one letter per slip of paper using markers.
- Put letter slips into plastic eggs and hide them around the space.
- Split into teams and give each team a clipboard to keep letters organized.
- Teams hunt eggs, open them, and collect letters.
- When a team thinks they have enough letters, they must assemble the correct word(s) and present them to the host.
- First team to correctly unscramble wins.
47. Bunny Nose Cup Pong

A family-friendly pong game using pastel cups and ping pong balls—no messy drinks needed.
Supplies
- 24 pink plastic cups
- 12 ping pong balls
- 1 folding table
- 1 pack Easter stickers (optional prizes)
Directions
- Set up a folding table and arrange pink cups in a triangle at each end.
- Players take turns tossing ping pong balls into the opposing team’s cups.
- When a ball lands in a cup, remove that cup from play.
- First team to remove all cups wins.
- For younger kids, let them stand closer; for older players, require a bounce shot every other turn.
- Optional: give winners Easter stickers as a quick prize.
48. Egg Hunt Puzzle Build

Hide puzzle pieces in eggs—teams race to complete the puzzle first.
Supplies
- 30 plastic Easter eggs
- 2 50-piece puzzles
- 2 storage bins (team bins)
- 1 folding table (optional)
Directions
- Split each puzzle into 25–30 small groups of pieces.
- Place small sets of pieces into plastic eggs and hide the eggs around the space.
- Divide players into two teams and give each team a storage bin for their collected eggs/pieces.
- Teams hunt eggs and bring them back to a build area (a folding table helps, but the floor works too).
- Once all eggs are found (or time is up), teams open eggs and race to assemble their puzzle.
- First team to complete the puzzle wins.
49. Bunny Tail Toss With Hoop

Toss cotton-ball “tails” into a hoop—simple, quick, and great for little kids too.
Supplies
- 1 hula hoop
- 50 cotton balls
- 1 roll painter’s tape (throw line)
- 1 small basket (tails)
Directions
- Place a hula hoop on the floor (or hang it at kid height outdoors).
- Fill a basket with cotton balls as “bunny tails.”
- Mark a throwing line with painter’s tape.
- Each player gets 10 tails to toss into the hoop.
- Score 1 point for each tail in the hoop, or award bonus points for landing in the center.
50. Egg Hunt Grand Finale Countdown

A high-energy final hunt with a countdown timer—perfect for ending the party with a bang.
Supplies
- 80 plastic Easter eggs
- 1 bag wrapped Easter candy
- 1 stopwatch timer
- 4 Easter baskets
- 1 pack gold plastic eggs (special finds)
Directions
- Fill plastic eggs with wrapped candy and mix in a few gold eggs as special prizes.
- Give each player (or each team) an Easter basket.
- Hide eggs quickly around the space while players wait at the start line.
- Set a 3–5 minute hunt timer on a stopwatch.
- Start the countdown and let everyone hunt—when time is up, everyone freezes.
- Count eggs or weigh baskets for a winner, and give bonus prizes for anyone who found a gold egg.
FAQ
How do I make these Easter games work for both little kids and adults?
Use the same game with different rules: let little kids stand closer, remove time limits, or allow helper partners, while adults play with tougher rules (one hand only, longer distances, faster rounds).
Having extra plastic Easter eggs on hand makes it easy to adjust difficulty and keep everyone included.
What are the best Easter games for indoors?
Egg and spoon challenges, bingo, charades, memory match, and cup stacking are all great inside because they don’t require running space.
Mark boundaries neatly with painter’s tape so you can set up a “game zone” that’s easy to clean up later.
What supplies cover the most games on this list?
If you want to shop once and be set, get plastic Easter eggs, painter’s tape, index cards, and a stopwatch timer.
Those four items alone can power a huge chunk of these games.
How do I keep Easter hunts fair when kids are different ages?
Do a color-coded hunt: assign each child a color of egg, or give younger kids a head start while older kids wait.
Another easy option is giving each child their own Easter basket and setting a limit (like “stop at 10 eggs”) so no one scoops up everything.
What are easy, low-mess prizes that still feel fun?
Stickers, temporary tattoos, mini erasers, and small toy assortments are all low-mess and party-friendly.
A bulk pack of Easter temporary tattoos is especially great because kids love them and they’re easy to hand out quickly between rounds.
How long should I plan for game time at an Easter party?
For a casual party, 45–60 minutes is perfect: pick 2–3 active games, 1 calmer table game, and finish with a big hunt.
Setting quick rounds with a 60-second timer keeps the energy up and helps you rotate through games without long downtime.
Easter Games
With a mix of silly relays, quick minute-to-win-it challenges, and classic hunts, these Easter games make it easy to keep every age group laughing and involved.
Choose a few favorites, set up simple stations, and rotate through rounds so everyone gets a chance to play.
If you stock up on basics like painter’s tape and plastic Easter eggs, you’ll be able to reuse them year after year for an Easter party that feels effortless but still totally memorable.
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