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Fostering Cooperation: Recommended Games to Enjoy in the Boy Scouts

Fostering Cooperation: Recommended Games to Enjoy in the Boy Scouts
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The Boy Scouts is an organization that aims to help children grow into healthy, wonderful adults by connecting with nature and interacting with friends from various generations.

Within the Boy Scouts, games are sometimes played as part of various activities.

In this article, we’ll introduce recommended games that you can enjoy in the Boy Scouts!

We’ve gathered a variety of games, including ones that use the knowledge and skills gained through contact with nature, as well as games that foster cooperation.

If you’re not sure which games to choose, be sure to use this as a reference!

[Fostering Cooperation] Recommended Games You Can Enjoy in the Boy Scouts (1–10)

Rope-Crawling Relay

In this game, several people hold hands, and a rope loop is passed along by stepping through it yourself and handing it to the person next to you.

When it makes a full circle, you’ve reached the goal.

Because everyone stays connected by holding hands, teamwork is crucial.

Precisely because we live in a world where doing things individually has become the norm, this is a game I want everyone to try.

It naturally fosters kindness, consideration for others, and cooperation—so give it a go!

human disentanglement puzzle

Team Communication Game: Human Knot [Sports Recreation Plan]
human disentanglement puzzle

Here’s a game you can play right away without preparing any equipment, and it also helps improve communication skills.

First, everyone holds hands in a way that creates a tangle with a large group.

Make sure your right hand and left hand are connected to different people.

From that tangled state, work together to figure out how to untangle yourselves.

You’re done when you’ve untangled into one circle, or into several circles.

Another fun variation is to split into a tangled team and an observing team that gives instructions from the outside to help them untangle.

Big Game Hunting

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Big Game Hunting

The game called “Wild Beast Hunt” is played by gathering the same number of people as the number of letters in the animal name that’s called out.

It’s well-known as a recreation activity in nurseries and kindergartens.

Since there aren’t any complicated rules, it’s something everyone can play even in Scouts, where there are kids of various ages.

If you have a large space, you can increase the distance before gathering so the children get more physical activity.

Depending on how you set it up, it can be a brain-training exercise, a team-building activity, and a way to build physical strength.

Stacking cardboard boxes

Founding Anniversary Ceremony & Outdoor Games (Boy Scouts Sakura 2nd Troop)
Stacking cardboard boxes

“Cardboard Stacking” is a game where you stack cardboard boxes of various sizes within a time limit and compete on the tower’s height at the end.

It’s simple yet thrilling! Players support the structure while watching teammates’ movements to prevent it from toppling as they place boxes, and when the tower gets too tall to reach, they can do shoulder rides—there are plenty of opportunities to build teamwork.

When it comes to Boy Scouts recreation, you usually play in spacious outdoor areas, so a game that lets you make full use of such a space is a great fit!

Line-up Game

How about a get-to-know-you recreation activity? There’s a game called the “Lineup Game,” where everyone lines up according to a given theme.

Split into teams, then line up by something simple like height, or by the order of your names in the Japanese syllabary, or by birthdays.

The team that lines up the fastest and most accurately wins.

This game only works if teammates communicate, so it’s a great icebreaker for talking to people you don’t know.

Keep the energy going by changing the prompts or shuffling teams—before you know it, everyone’s friends!

epicenter

[Play] 5 Fun Group Games [Nursery/Kindergarten]
epicenter

An epicenter game that has been popular for a long time.

Many people—even your mother or grandmother’s generation—may have played it.

First, you divide into the tagger and everyone else, then choose one person from the non-tagger team to be the epicenter.

The epicenter kid makes various movements without letting the tagger notice, and the other kids copy those movements while watching.

It’s a simple game where the tagger has to guess who the epicenter is, but it takes some ingenuity—like changing the movements when the tagger isn’t looking, or not staring directly at the epicenter.

Guess the ◯ seconds/◯ minutes game

Is there anyone who’s confident in their sense of time? This game lets you check whether your internal sense of time is accurate.

Use a stopwatch or the stopwatch function on your phone: press the start button, then press stop when you think 10 seconds have passed.

Try it with a group; the person closest to 10 seconds wins.

It’s fun with many players, but if there are only a few, you can split it into multiple rounds—Round 1, Round 2, and so on.