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[Childcare] Easy! Make a DIY target game. Playful craft and fun game

When holding a mock street fair or summer festival at a nursery or kindergarten, it’s common to set up a game corner, isn’t it?

This time, we’re introducing handmade target-throwing games that are perfect for early childhood settings.

From creations using recycled materials like paper cups, chopsticks, and plastic bottles to decorated versions for special events, we’ve got plenty of target game ideas that will make participating children’s eyes light up with excitement!

Choose options that suit the children’s ages and developmental stages, and try making them together.

Target games have lots of benefits—they spark children’s curiosity and help cultivate concentration, thinking skills, and motor control.

Be sure to include them and have fun together with the kids.

[Childcare] Easy! Let’s make a DIY target game. Playful crafts and fun games (11–20)

Target Game with Milk Cartons

An easy project you can try using items lying around the house is a target-shooting game made from a milk carton.

In fact, this game was invented by Masato Kubota, famous from the popular TV show “Tsukutte Asobo.” First, prepare one milk carton and cut off the bottom.

Then cut off the top as well, and open the carton so it lies flat.

Next, fold it into a mountain fold down the center and staple it to hold the shape.

It will look like the kanji character for “mountain.” Hook a rubber band onto it, pull back from the rear, and you’ve got a launcher ready to go.

Setsubun: Oni Target-Throwing Game

DIY Setsubun: Oni Target-Throw Game | How to Make an Ogre Extermination Game
Setsubun: Oni Target-Throwing Game

This is a target-throwing game where you toss balls at an oni that keeps popping back up like a roly-poly toy, no matter how many times it’s knocked down.

It’s inspired by Setsubun bean-throwing: instead of beans, you throw balls.

Pack oil clay into a capsule, make a hole through the center for a bamboo skewer, and thread the skewer through.

Attach and secure a drawing of an oni to the skewer, and it’s done! Repeatedly aiming at a target that’s hard to topple helps improve control and boost concentration.

It’s a fun and safe target game that children can enjoy—give it a try!

Festival vibes at the shooting game!

[Craft Fair Booth] Let's make a shooting game and play! Easy craft—festival vibes!
Festival vibes at the shooting game!

If you want a shooting game setup that feels closer to a real festival, I recommend taking inspiration from “festival-style” target shooting.

First, prepare a rectangular piece of cardboard and cut out a rectangular opening around the area below the center.

Fold along the cuts to create a U-shaped base.

Then, use toothpicks to fix the piece you cut out earlier onto this base.

That way, when a shot hits the center portion, the target will topple—your falling target is complete.

It gives a much stronger festival vibe than a regular target.

There are also websites that share detailed blueprints, so be sure to check them out.

Strikeout

Thank you for waiting! As requested, here is how to make a strikeout game.
Strikeout

Strikeout is a game where you throw balls at a target labeled with the numbers 1 through 9 and compete to see how many targets you can knock out of the frame.

While it’s used for ball games and sports practice, it’s also perfect for childcare settings.

Cut out a large piece of cardboard to create nine openings, and reinforce the frames with the cut-out cardboard pieces.

Secure the targets with straws or similar supports so they don’t fall backward, and set it up so that they tip over when hit by beanbags or soft balls.

It’s a fun target-throwing game that can be enjoyed in a spacious indoor area and doubles as sports practice.

Ghost Ball-Throw Game

[Craft Play 032] Introduction to a Halloween Ghost Ball-Toss Game: A target practice activity where hitting the hat changes the ghost’s expression
Ghost Ball-Throw Game

A game where you throw a ball at illustrations of Halloween ghosts to knock off their hats and play.

When a hat falls, the ghost’s expression changes thanks to a clever mechanism, making it a fun target game.

You will need cardboard, a permanent marker, OPP tape, a utility knife, and A4 copy paper.

Use the cardboard to create the mechanism.

Draw two types of ghost illustrations on A4 copy paper, then add the hat parts on top to finish.

Try making the ball you throw at the ghosts as a Halloween-themed character, too.