Recommended for anyone looking for activities and recreation for girls!
In this article, we introduce a wide variety of popular games for girls, easy recreation games, and cute crafts.
They’re all fun activities that can be enjoyed regardless of age, so if you’re thinking, “I don’t know what games girls will enjoy,” or “I want to find games that girls can get excited about together,” please use this as a reference.
It’s also perfect for game time and hands-on activities during Hinamatsuri (Girls’ Day) events, and for livening up celebrations at home.
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- Games you can play with just conversation. Classic and popular activities you can enjoy without any props!
- No worries even in the rain! Fun recreational activities you can do in the gym
- [For University Students] A Roundup of Fun Games and Recreational Activities
- [List] A roundup of games and recreational activities kids love
- [For Girls] Make It with Everyday Items! Easy but Super Cute Craft Ideas
- [Children’s Club] Easy and fun indoor games. Exciting party games
- Party games for women that are guaranteed to be a hit
- [Elementary School] Indoor Games and Recreational Activities Recommended for Upper Primary Grades
- A simple and fun co-op game that enhances teamwork
Fun Activities and Recreational Games for Girls (1–10)
Let’s make accessories with Perler beads!
Girls get excited when they play with beads and see or touch sparkly things, right? And I think they love accessories too.
Let’s play with fuse beads (Perler beads) so you can make accessories and mascots to suit your own taste! Fuse beads are plastic beads that you arrange on a pegboard to create any pattern you like; then you place a special sheet on top and apply an iron.
The heat melts the plastic so the beads stick together.
There are pegboards shaped like hearts, stars, and more, but it’s also fun to design your own.
You can even make hair accessories easily!
So fun you’ll get hooked! Tin Can Stilts

Cang-pokkuri stilts—your parents’ generation, and maybe even your grandparents, probably played with them too.
These days you can buy plastic or wooden versions, but how about making your own with empty cans you have at home? Just prepare two cans of the same size, make holes, and thread a cord through—easy to assemble.
It’s also fun to decorate them with tape or markers so you can tell which ones are yours.
If it’s hard for small children to play on their own, an adult should hold their hands and play together.
Popular hand game! One hundred thousand feet of the Alps ~ seventy thousand feet

Hand-clapping songs are one of those games that many people know and enjoy, from small children to the elderly.
Among them, “Arupusu Ichimanjaku” is very famous—a hand-clapping song that your grandparents probably know too, so you can play together.
Best of all, hand-clapping songs don’t require any tools and can be played anywhere, which makes them so easy and convenient.
And did you know that “Arupusu Ichimanjaku” actually has lyrics up to verse 29? It might be fun to look up the lyrics and try playing while singing all the way to verse 29 (haha).
Easy hand knitting you can start at age 5!

I think many girls are interested in handicrafts.
But sewing can be dangerous because of needles, or you might not have a sewing machine, and knitting can be difficult and feel like a high hurdle.
However, finger knitting, which doesn’t use needles, is something anyone can easily do.
You wrap yarn around one hand and use the fingers of your other hand to loop and knit the yarn.
These days, you can find all kinds of yarn at 100-yen shops.
I think it would be cute to try knitting little accessories for dolls or plush toys with your favorite yarn.
Handmade crayons: let’s make them in any shape you like!

Handmade crayons—can you really make crayons? You might wonder, but it’s actually very easy to create your own cute originals.
All you need are crayons and a silicone mold.
Even though “making” them just means melting the crayons and letting them harden again, by mixing colors for a marbled look or using star and heart shapes, you can end up with completely different, adorable crayons.
Both crayons and silicone molds are available at 100-yen shops, so it’s super convenient.
To make them, simply cut the crayons into small pieces with scissors, put them into the silicone mold, melt them in the microwave, and let them harden again.
Easy with a snack bag! Make a cute pouch

A super cute candy pouch.
It looks like something you’d buy, but you can actually make it yourself! And amazingly, you don’t need any needles or thread—no sewing required! The method is really simple: cut out the package of your favorite candy with scissors, stick it onto a card case with double-sided tape, then take two card cases cut to the same size, stick them together with double-sided tape, and attach a zipper.
Of course, you just attach the zipper with double-sided tape as well.
You can make it with your favorite candy packaging, and it would probably make a great gift for a friend too.
Addictive! Rubber-band jumping steps

It’s a retro game, but for some reason everyone gets hooked on it—rubber band jumping.
Also known as “gomu-dan,” it’s been a classic game for girls for ages.
All you need is an elastic band and you can play anywhere, indoors or out.
It’s an easy game that lets you move your body even inside, so it’s popular with little kids right up to older girls.
There are all kinds of moves: spreading and closing your feet to straddle the band, stepping on it, twisting it and returning it, and more.
You often see kids who keep jumping endlessly—hooking the far band, pulling it over, letting it go, and so on.
Moms might find themselves joining in too, swept up by nostalgia (laughs).
Let’s make a cute kaleidoscope with origami!

A fascinating origami that whirls and changes shapes and expressions like a kaleidoscope.
It looks very intricate and difficult to make, but it’s actually quite simple—you just fold eight pieces into heart shapes and connect them together.
Plus, you don’t need scissors or glue; all you need is origami paper.
Once you start folding, you tend to get quiet and absorbed, don’t you? The key is to make crisp creases, and after connecting the pieces, keep them firm—ideally clip them to hold the shape—so it spins more smoothly.
Did you know? Nostalgic old-fashioned temari song

“Antagata Dokosa” is a song that has been passed down and played for generations.
It’s so well-known that almost everyone has heard it—and probably sung it too! As the lyrics themselves mention, the song’s formal title is “Higo Temari Uta,” a traditional children’s temari (handball) song.
While bouncing a ball on the ground, you lift your leg to pass the ball underneath, and handle the ball in time with the song and rhythm.
A little girl singing while bouncing a ball—what a charming sight, isn’t it?
Easy Microwave Homemade Amber Candy

You might want to try making sweets, but using heat can be scary, and gathering all the ingredients isn’t always easy—it can feel like a surprisingly high hurdle, right? But this amber candy can be made with things you already have at home, and you don’t even need to use a stove, so it’s safe.
First, add water to sugar and heat it in the microwave.
It will quickly turn that beautiful amber color of traditional hard candy! Then pour it onto parchment paper in just the right size, insert a toothpick or bamboo skewer from above, and once it sets, it’s done.
Wrap it in cellophane and tie a ribbon, and it turns into an adorable lollipop-style candy!



