[For Seniors] Easy to try. Fun, crowd-pleasing recreation
For those who use senior care facilities or day services, lively recreational activities are important, aren’t they?
In this article, we introduce activities that everyone can try together as well as ones individuals can enjoy on their own.
All of them are exciting and easy to try once you learn the simple rules.
Even games that might look difficult at first—like rock-paper-scissors relays or ball bowling—can be done while seated, so no worries.
We hope you’ll all give them a try so that recreation can help invigorate the minds and bodies of older adults.
- [For Seniors] Easy and fun seated activities you can do in your room
- [For Seniors] Simple Tabletop Games: Fun and Engaging Recreational Activities
- [For Seniors] Simple Recreational Activities You Can Enjoy While Seated
- [For Seniors] Exciting! Ball-Based Recreation
- [For Seniors] Fun Recreational Activities Without Equipment
- [For Seniors] Enjoy safely even during the COVID-19 pandemic: Seated activities
- [For Seniors] Enjoyment at Day Care: A Roundup of Games and Recreational Activities
- [For Seniors] Today’s Recommended Activity: Fun and Engaging
- [For Seniors] Guaranteed to Be a Hit! Popular Day Service Recreational Activities
- [For Seniors] Enjoyable Day Service: A Collection of Fun Event Ideas
- [For Seniors] Introducing Recreational Activities Anyone Can Enjoy at Geriatric Health Facilities!
- [For Seniors] Enjoyable Indoor Activities! Recreations and Games That Engage the Mind and Body
- [For Seniors] Exciting Team-Based Recreational Activities
[For Seniors] Easy to Try: Fun, Crowd-Pleasing Recreational Activities (21–30)
Simple Balloon Volley

This is balloon volleyball, where you rally a balloon that floats gently through the air.
Ask older adults to sit on chairs in a circle and try to keep the balloon from touching the floor.
It helps to have someone in the center who can provide support so the rally continues more easily.
Balloons feel soft and are light, making them safer and less likely to cause injury for older participants.
Trying not to drop the balloon also encourages interaction among everyone.
With lively chatter and a fun atmosphere, older adults can enjoy balloon volleyball too.
Clap-Clap Game

This is a game where everyone tries to clap right in time with the designated person’s movements.
The designated person turns to the side, extends one hand, and then brings the other hand over to overlap it.
Everyone claps at the exact moment the hands meet.
If the hands come together too slowly, it’s hard to sync the sound, so keep a certain pace.
While you might expect a steady rhythm, the key to making the game exciting is throwing in twists—like not letting the hands meet on the final beat.
[For Seniors] Easy to Try: Fun, Lively Recreational Activities (31–40)
Pool Stick Valley

Let’s have fun with a balloon volleyball game using pool noodles you can even buy at 100-yen shops.
Make a ring with one pool noodle and hang it from above.
Have the seniors sit in chairs in a circle, each holding a pool noodle.
When the balloon comes to them, they hit it back with their noodle.
If they can aim well, have them try to send the balloon through the hanging ring.
With a target to aim for, seniors are sure to get excited about balloon volleyball! It also seems like a great way to encourage interaction with those around them.
Telephone game

This is a game where you pass a given word along to the next person in order, aiming to convey the original word accurately all the way to the end.
Because how people hear things can vary, make sure to pronounce clearly while also focusing closely on the sounds when you listen.
The goal is accurate transmission, but even if mistakes happen, it’s fun to analyze how the message drifted.
It’s also recommended to add twists to the prompts, such as deliberately choosing words that are easy to confuse with others or giving them unusual endings.
Balloon volleyball holding hands

Balloon volleyball played while holding hands is an activity where cooperation becomes the key point.
Forming groups of four and playing while holding hands may be more challenging than regular balloon volleyball.
I believe that calling out to one another is the secret to keeping the rally going.
When rallies that initially failed start to continue as everyone coordinates their efforts, older adults may also feel a sense of accomplishment.
With balloon volleyball played while holding hands, the laughter and encouraging shouts will fill the room with energy, making it a fun and lively time.
bamboo shoot digging

Let’s liven things up with a game themed around one of spring’s seasonal flavors: bamboo shoots.
Some seniors may have even gone out to dig bamboo shoots in a bamboo grove.
In this game, you win if you can catch the bamboo shoot—made from a paper cup—faster than your opponent.
Real bamboo shoot digging takes strength and can be tough, but with this game, where both the “tool” and the bamboo shoot are paper cups, seniors with hemiplegia can enjoy it easily.
Through the game, some seniors might recall times when they dug bamboo shoots or ate them.
Fluttering a vinyl sheet away with a hand fan

We’ll introduce a fun seated game using a fan: fluttering a plastic bag with a uchiwa.
Prepare a uchiwa (hand fan), a milk carton, beanbags, and a plastic bag, and let’s enjoy the game.
Put a beanbag inside the milk carton to give it stability so it won’t tip over.
Once you place the plastic bag over the top, the game begins.
Use the uchiwa to fan and knock the plastic bag off.
The first person to get it off wins.
It’s exciting even with a small group.
Once you get the hang of it, set a time limit to add a thrilling, suspenseful twist.


