Games for 10 People! Fun Activities That Get Kids and Adults Excited Together
Many of you are probably looking for games that everyone can enjoy together.
In fact, there are plenty of games that are especially exciting precisely because they can be played with 10 or more people.
You can toss out prompts and share laughs, get serious with team face-offs, and sometimes even suffer a funny penalty game.
Here, we’ll introduce everything from classic games that shine with large groups to hidden gems that surprisingly few people know about.
Find a game that will put a smile on everyone’s face at your get-togethers and parties!
- Fun for up to 10 people! A collection of easy, no-equipment games and activities
- Games You Can Play with 100 People! Fun Game Ideas for Large Groups
- Party games collection that get everyone excited in a big group
- Games for 20 People with No Equipment Needed: A Collection of Fun Ideas That Use Your Body and Mind
- Games and activities everyone can enjoy together. A collection of fun play ideas.
- Games that get everyone excited without any equipment! A collection of simple ideas everyone can enjoy
- No props needed: games everyone can play—fun activities using only voices and gestures
- [For Kids] Indoor Fun! Large-Group Recreational Activities and Games
- Team-based recreational activities for adults that are fun even with large groups
- [From small to large groups] Drinking games recommended for college students
- Laugh and have fun! A collection of funny 10-times game questions
- A big hit at after-school childcare! A special feature on group games and activities you can play without any equipment
- A fun, everyone-joins-in game that gets everyone excited!
Games You Can Play with 10 People! Fun Activities for Kids and Adults to Enjoy Together (1–10)
Top 3 recommended board games for 10 players

Released over 30 years ago, 6 nimmt! is such a classic that it’s considered one of the greats among board games.
Some people might not know that it can actually be played with up to 10 players.
It’s a card game that doesn’t take up much space, so I highly recommend it.
Next up is a product called Renzo Bingo.
Many of you have probably experienced bingo at events and the like.
The key point is that the rules are easy to understand for both children and adults.
Finally, there’s PANDA ROYALE, which features simple, easy-to-grasp rules.
It’s a game where the player who scores the most points using an increasing number of dice each round wins.
Be sure to give it a try.
Play together! 10-Second Bomb Game!
@wakuwaku_idea Elderly Recreation: Simple and Super Fun 10-Second Bomb GameElderlyRecreationTranslationFun
♪ Original song – Idea Wakuwaku Rehabilitation – Idea Wakuwaku Rehabilitation
This is a simple, easy-to-understand recreation where you pass a ball to others within a time limit! Ten people form a circle and keep passing a ball or balloon to the person next to them.
Once you get used to it, you can also throw or pass the ball or balloon to a specific person you’re aiming for.
When the timer signaling the time limit goes off, the person holding the ball or balloon loses! It’s also fun for each person to come up with and try out their own strategy.
It’s a heart-pounding game that treats the ball or balloon like a bomb.
A rhythm game that toddlers can enjoy

Moving your body to songs and rhythms can really lift your spirits, right? It introduces games that are fun even with large groups, like “Kaminari-don,” “Yakiimo Goo Choki Paa,” “Anpan Shokupan,” and “The Greengrocer’s Shop.” The rhythm game “The Greengrocer’s Shop” is a unique activity that fosters memory, concentration, and the ability to recall familiar items based on a theme.
How about trying it at events with preschoolers? It’s full of fun ideas that people of all ages can enjoy.
Games for 10 People! Fun Activities That Get Kids and Adults Alike Excited (11–20)
World Play! ‘Please Statue Play’

The American game “statue game” is basically a form of tag.
However, the tagger plays the role of a sculptor, and anyone who gets tagged has to freeze into a statue within the time it takes to spin around twice, becoming whatever statue the tagger calls out.
If the tagger says “frog,” everyone who’s been caught has to hold a frog pose and can’t move until everyone is tagged, so depending on the type of statue, it can be pretty tough.
Once everyone is caught, the tagger chooses their favorite statue and names that person as the next tagger.
Top 5 most entertaining tag games in the world

Tag, a classic outdoor game for children, is actually enjoyed in many countries around the world.
Tag from around the world… you’re curious what those games are like, right? This time, we’ll introduce five versions: the Filipino tag game “Buwan-Buwan,” the Sri Lankan tag game “Gini Hangima,” the Moroccan tag game “The Hen and the Caterpillar,” the German tag game “The Spinning Top on the Rock,” and the Bangladeshi tag game “Chi-Buri.” Depending on the country, the rules and ways to play vary—like having the tagger move only along lines or adding a treasure-hunt element—so give these different kinds of tag a try and enjoy a twist on the usual game!
Adults going all out at the park!

Games we used to play as kids can be surprisingly fun even after we grow up.
So why not enjoy some outdoor games for the first time in a while? Here we introduce two types of tag games: “Kotorokotoro” and “Hyotan Oni.” In Kotorokotoro, players are divided into one chaser (oni) and the children.
The children line up, placing their hands on the shoulders of the person in front.
The oni faces the line, and wins if they can tag the child at the very end.
In Hyotan Oni, you draw a gourd-shaped safe zone on the ground, and the children run around inside it.
The oni reaches in from outside the gourd, and if they manage to tag someone, they swap roles with that person.
Showa-era game! “Rice Field Character T”

Imagine the kanji “田” and draw four large square grids on the ground.
Decide one person to be ‘It’ with rock-paper-scissors, then start the game.
‘It’ moves along the cross-shaped lines at the center of the squares to catch the others.
The players choose one of the squares as their starting point, move clockwise from square to square, and return to their starting point.
If someone is caught by ‘It’ along the way, that person becomes the next ‘It’ and the game restarts from the beginning.
‘It’ is not allowed to jump between lines; they must move only along the lines.


