Indoor games that different ages can enjoy! Ideas for fun everyone can get excited about together
Games that children of different ages can enjoy together, creating opportunities for interaction between older and younger kids.
Here, we introduce games that make everyone smile, even when there’s an age gap.
With thoughtful handicaps and rule adjustments, these activities will captivate both little ones and their older peers.
From easy-to-understand balance games that get everyone excited, to cooperative team activities like hoop relays, there are plenty of safe indoor games to enjoy.
Through play that makes the most of the unique benefits of mixed-age care, help nurture warm relationships among the children!
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Handmade Play Using Tools (1–10)
Drawing together

They say we use completely different parts of the brain when drawing pictures and when writing letters.
It would be great to help both develop in a balanced way.
Group drawing time is a lot of fun.
For young children who are just starting to hold crayons, how about having them draw basic shapes like straight lines, circles, and squares? For around three-year-olds, you could level up the prompt to something like, “Let’s try drawing something round,” or “I’d love for you to draw something triangular.” Just holding crayons or colored pencils is exciting!
Target shooting game

It’s a game you can play anywhere as long as you have a ball and a target.
But don’t throw balls in the classroom! Stuffed animals or figurines work fine as targets.
If you’re doing this in kindergarten or daycare, it’s fun to make your own targets.
You can quickly make targets by rolling paper into a tube or folding it into an L-shape, and you can decorate them however you like.
To balance different ages, have little kids throw from a bit closer, while older kids step back about five meters before throwing.
Craft activities for 2- to 5-year-old children

The difficulty of crafts varies by age.
But if you divide up the tasks, everyone can work on the same project together! For example, if you’re making fruit, the older child can cut out the shapes with scissors, while the younger one draws simple patterns with crayons.
Or the older child can tear colored paper, and the younger one can glue the pieces to make a torn-paper collage.
When big brothers and sisters lend a hand, even little ones can try all sorts of things.
And for the older kids, it’s a natural way to learn how to coordinate with others and prepare things for someone else.
Storm Storm Big Storm Game

Let’s play using our heads and bodies! Here’s an idea for the Big Storm Game.
Depending on the age group, it’s helpful to prepare visual aids like sample diagrams or origami markers.
Assign one child as the squirrel and two children as the trees.
At the teacher’s cue, “A wolf is coming!” the squirrel moves to a different tree.
At the cue, “A lumberjack is coming!” the trees move to a different squirrel.
At the cue, “A big storm is coming!” everyone moves and pairs up with different friends.
To start, try playing while using the sample diagram or markers as guides!
Balloon Whack Game

Here’s a game using balloons that kids love: the Balloon Smack Game.
It’s basically the summer watermelon-smashing game, but with a balloon instead of a watermelon.
One designated player wears a blindfold and swings a plastic bat toward the balloon.
Spectators should keep a safe distance and guide the player with their voices: “To the right!” “A little farther back!” and so on, helping them find the balloon.
It also works well as a warm-up when you’re planning to do a real watermelon-smashing activity at an overnight camp or summer festival.



