RAG MusicRecreation
Lovely senior life

Games that liven up group homes. Fun recreational activities.

Group homes are senior care facilities with the charm of a warm, homelike atmosphere where residents can feel as if they’re at home.

Recreation is an essential part of everyday life in such settings.

Since most residents are older adults living with dementia, you’ll want to offer activities that help stimulate both mind and body.

For those seniors, how about trying “games and recreational activities that liven up the group home”?

This article introduces recreational ideas that are useful in the daily lives of older adults.

Care workers, please use this article as a reference.

Games that liven up a group home: Fun recreational activities (21–30)

Casual Ball Curling

[Easy-to-prepare and exciting recreation] [Day service activity] Simple circle-style ball curling
Casual Ball Curling

Curling became well-known through the Winter Olympics, so many of you may already be familiar with it.

It’s a team game where you compete to see which team can get their balls closer to the center ball.

Preparing this recreation is as simple as getting a few balls ready.

That’s all it takes to create a fun activity that helps participants interact more with each other.

Since it can be played while seated, it’s also appealing because it can be enjoyed in a way that suits the physical and mental conditions of older adults.

Recipe card

This is a card game where you pick two words from the lined-up cards and combine them to complete the name of a dish.

The key is how many dish names you can recall from memory based on the letters in front of you.

It’s also recommended to shuffle in a dummy card that forms a complete dish name on its own—it can mislead players, spark ideas, or serve as a hint for a similar dish.

It should be fun not only to come up with correct dish names, but also to invent plausible-sounding ones that don’t actually exist.

karuta (traditional Japanese playing cards)

[Senior Recreation] Rec Craftsman Series Part 195: 'Song Karuta' [Songs/Lyrics/Intros/Quiz/Karaoke/Brain Training]
karuta (traditional Japanese playing cards)

Karuta is a game where you listen to the reading cards and compete to grab the picture cards.

It’s recommended for people with dementia because it stimulates hearing and sight.

When playing with a large group, commercially available karuta sets may be a bit small, so it could be fun to make your own sets together, such as a “Popular Songs Karuta” or a “National Travel Karuta.” Karuta used to be a classic New Year’s pastime, and many older adults likely have one or two memories connected to it.

It would be wonderful to enjoy karuta along with those memories and the conversations they bring.

Shiritori

Shiritori, a word game many of us have played since childhood, is also a recommended recreation for people with dementia.

One of its strengths is how easy it is—no materials or preparation required.

It’s handy for filling small pockets of time, like on the bus when going out to the suburbs.

Another plus is that you can adjust the difficulty to match the person’s cognitive level.

You can customize freely with rules like “three-letter words only” or “food items only.” You could also set a goal, such as “finish after connecting 50 words.”

Whac-A-Mole

[100-yen shop] Super-exciting recreation with a paper-cup Whac-A-Mole
Whac-A-Mole

Here’s a fun and brain-training activity using paper cups: Whack-a-mole! Prepare about 10 to 20 paper cups and draw moles on them to make your moles.

Attach a pair of chopsticks to a paper cup to create a hammer for whacking the moles.

By involving older adults from the making stage, it also becomes a craft activity.

Whether as a craft or as a whack-a-mole game, it uses the hands.

Dexterous finger movements help stimulate the brain.

The whacking motion can help improve joint movement and is expected to boost concentration as well.

It would be exciting to turn it into a team competition for a recreation session.