[Easy] Recommended Playing Card Games Kids Can Enjoy Too
We’ve put together a list of recommended card games for when you want to play casually with a group or deepen bonds with everyone gathered at home.
From classics to games with slightly more complex rules, there’s a fairly wide lineup.
Some can even be played solo, so you can compete with friends for the fastest clear time.
Precisely because smartphones and PC games are the mainstream now, these analog games can really heat things up.
Take your time and check them out!
- A card game for two players
- A card game for three players. Enjoy mind games and psychological battles!
- Recommended for upper elementary grades! Exciting indoor recreation and games
- Types of playing cards and how to play
- [Elementary School] Quick and Easy! Indoor Recreational Activities Perfect for Lower Grades
- Perfect for killing time! A roundup of games for three people to enjoy
- Recommended card game. Easy! Fun! Adults get hooked too!
- [Easy] A roundup of recommended card games that kids can enjoy too
- Get the party started! A roundup of perfect playing card games for drinking parties
- [Children’s Club] Easy and fun indoor games. Exciting party games
- [Play Right Away!] Exciting Recreation Games Recommended for Elementary School Students
- Types of card games and how to play them
- [For Kids] Fun Either Way: A Collection of Rock-Paper-Scissors Game Ideas
[Easy] Recommended Playing Card Games Kids Can Enjoy (11–20)
Hearts

How about playing a card game called Hearts, which has various ways to play, during your time at home? Among the different variations, the one called “Black Lady” is often referred to as Hearts.
The rules are to play while avoiding taking the heart-suit cards that give negative points and the Queen of Spades, and the participant with the fewest negative points at the end wins! It’s for 3 to 6 players, and what’s interesting is that the types of cards used can change depending on the number of players.
Remember that Aces are the strongest cards and 2s are the weakest.
Once you learn the rules, even kids can give it a try easily!
Solitaire

When it comes to classic single-player card games, solitaire is the go-to! It’s been well-known for ages as an online and app-based game.
You lay out face-down cards in seven columns from left to right with 1, 2, 3… up to 7 cards.
The remaining cards become the stock.
At this point, only the frontmost card in each column is turned face up.
You then build tableau piles by placing cards in descending order with alternating red and black colors, and you clear the game by stacking each suit from A to K.
It’s a brain-teasing game that’s perfect for kids who enjoy playing solo.
How about giving it a try in your spare time?
nervous breakdown

The card game that tests your memory is Concentration! You flip over two cards from a face-down layout and try to match cards with the same number.
The key is to rely on your memory to remember where matching numbers were placed.
The player who collects the most cards at the end wins.
It’s important to shuffle the cards well at the start and to lay them out in a thoroughly randomized order.
It’s generally advantageous to flip later in the turn order, so think strategically as you play.
Napoleon

Let me introduce Napoleon, a world-famous card game so popular that tournaments are held for it! There are many local variations, but the basic rules are that five players each play one card per trick, and the player who plays the strongest card takes all the cards on the table; this is repeated throughout the game.
As the game progresses, the person appointed as the “Vice (Adjutant)” becomes a key figure, and the competition between Napoleon’s army and the Allied forces to capture face cards really spices things up! Be sure to try playing it with your friends.
FreeCell

FreeCell, a classic computer game, is a single-player card game.
Using the four spaces called Free Cells, you skillfully organize the cards that are scattered across eight columns, and move all of them to the spaces called Home Cells.
It’s a brain-training game that makes you think.
There are various rules, which may be a bit confusing at first, but you’ll pick them up as you play! Once you start, it’s surprisingly easy—even recommended for kids! Perfect for time at home or little breaks.
Old Maid

Let me introduce an arranged version of Old Maid called “Jiji-nuki”! Remove the Joker from a standard 52-card deck, then take out one more card to create the “Jiji,” and start the game.
Deal the remaining 51 cards to the players.
Starting with the dealer and going clockwise, each player draws a card from the next player’s hand; if they can make a pair, they discard it.
In regular Old Maid, the Joker ends up as the last remaining card, but in Jiji-nuki you don’t know which card is the “Jiji,” so you’ll feel the suspense right up to the end! Give it a try!
[Easy] Recommended Playing Card Games Kids Can Enjoy (21–30)
Indian poker

Indian poker is a game where you bet while guessing whether the value of the card you can’t see—the one on your own forehead—beats your opponent’s card or not.
First, draw one card from the prepared deck and place it against your forehead like an Indian feather so that you can’t see your own number.
You can see your opponent’s number, so if you think your card is higher, you bet; if you’re not confident, you can fold.
The more players there are, the stronger the psychological element becomes, so if you have a deck of cards at hand, it’s a game you should definitely try.


