[Age 5] Exciting and fun! A special feature on ideas for at-home play
By the age of five, more children can enjoy games with rules and have fun competing in games with friends and adults.
In this article, we’ll introduce at-home activities that are perfect for five-year-olds.
We’ve gathered a variety of ideas—from games with easy-to-understand rules, to activities that get kids moving indoors, to crafts that are fun to make—so feel free to use them as a reference and give them a try.
Not only for times when you can’t play outside, but also for those moments when you just feel like staying in, we hope you’ll enjoy these with your family and siblings.
- Recommended for 5-year-olds! Simple DIY toy ideas
- Ideas for indoor activities, games, and group play that 5-year-olds enjoy
- [Childcare] Playful craft ideas to enjoy with 5-year-olds
- [For 5-Year-Olds] Recommended Indoor Play! A Collection of Exciting Games
- Ideas for indoor activities and group games that 5-year-olds like
- For 4-year-olds! A collection of indoor home play ideas that make time inside fun
- For 3-Year-Olds! Indoor & Outdoor Physical Play and Game Ideas
- [For 4-Year-Olds] A Collection of Indoor Play and Game Ideas That Get Everyone Excited
- For 5-Year-Olds: Let’s Make It! A Collection of Craft Ideas to Feel the Spring
- [For 4-year-olds] Ideas for group games and craft activities that can be done indoors
- Recommended for 3-year-olds! Fun indoor activities and group game ideas
- [Kindergarten] Let’s Play with Quizzes! A Collection of Recommended Quizzes for Older Kindergarteners
- Indoor activities that 2-year-olds can enjoy. Recommended at-home games that will keep them engaged.
[Age 5] Exciting and Fun! A Collection of At-Home Play Ideas (41–50)
Pasta Twirling Race

Here’s a perfect indoor activity: the Pasta Twirl Relay.
Prepare “pasta” by using yarn on a paper plate and attach it with tape.
On the untaped end of the yarn, fix a cardboard tube (like a plastic wrap core).
During the race, hold the tube and spin it to wind up the yarn.
It’s a fun contest to see who can wind the yarn “pasta” onto the tube the fastest.
You can make it even more exciting by placing a cutout of an animal with an open mouth between the paper plate and the tube, along with a panel that looks like it’s eating.
Timing each round and racing against the clock can also add to the fun.
Bingo game

Here’s a bingo game that also helps you learn the names of vegetables.
Prepare paper and a felt-tip pen, and draw a 3×3 grid.
In each square, write the name of a vegetable or draw a picture of one.
You’ll draw vegetable cards one by one; when the same vegetable appears, draw a circle and mark it on your grid.
There’s also a Skull card mixed in: if you draw the Skull card, the vegetable you just drew gets a cross (is canceled).
After the Skull card mode ends, you return to normal mode.
Try it out and see who can get a reach or bingo first!
Signaling Game

It’s also great for a quick play during small breaks! Here’s an idea for a traffic light game.
Traffic lights are important indicators for learning traffic rules.
When crossing roads where cars and bicycles are moving, they play a crucial role in keeping yourself safe.
This time, let’s use the colors of the traffic light to play a game.
Move forward on “green,” step back on “yellow,” and stop on “red.” Through these simple rules, children can get a feel for the basic rules of “waiting” and “moving.”
sensory play

Sensory play is a recommended activity that stimulates children’s five senses.
When you put a cooling sheet in water, it swells and feels like slime.
For play with shaving cream, try putting the cream into a paper cup and mixing it, or adding color to the cream and applying it.
Doing this alongside crafts helps nurture their imagination.
For scratch art, draw a picture underneath with crayons, then layer black crayon on top and scratch it away.
It’s exciting to see the black crayon scrape off and the colors underneath appear.
It’s also great to mix water with flour or potato starch, knead it, and enjoy the gooey texture.
Using pulp clay to create shapes from one’s imagination also sounds like a lot of fun.
Handmade microphone

Let me introduce a cute original microphone craft.
Prepare a plastic wrap tube, a capsule toy container, origami paper, and yarn, and let’s make it.
Wrap the origami paper around the plastic wrap tube so that a bit of the paper sticks out on either the left or right side.
On the side where the paper sticks out, tape on the yarn, crumple the extra paper to make it small, and tuck it into the center of the wrap tube—this completes the microphone handle.
Next, place the capsule toy container on top of the wrap tube and tape it so it won’t fall off, and your microphone is complete! Draw a switch on the handle, and add illustrations or stickers as you like to create your very own original microphone.
Number Touch Game

Here’s a number-touch game you can play by touching numbers posted on a wall.
Write numbers on pieces of paper and stick them randomly on the wall.
Have the children memorize where each number is.
The teacher calls out a number, and the children touch the number that was called.
It’s also a game that trains memory and quick reactions as they recall where the number is.
Be sure to place the numbers at a height the children can reach.
Changing the colors of the papers or adding other variations may make them easier to remember.
A game using clothespins

Let me introduce a game that uses everyday clothespins.
Get a cardboard tube from plastic wrap, a paper plate, and some clothespins, and give it a try.
Place the paper plate on top of the cardboard tube, then gently place clothespins on the plate one by one.
The key is to place them carefully so they don’t fall.
The player who drops a clothespin loses.
It also sounds fun to clip the clothespins onto the edge of the paper plate! Drawing on the cardboard tube or the paper plate might make the game even more exciting.
Give it a try!



