[Elementary School] Quick and Easy! Indoor Recreational Activities Perfect for Lower Grades
We’ve gathered a bunch of fun recreational activities that will make lower elementary school kids want to get moving! From active indoor games that offer plenty of exercise to brain-teasing games you can enjoy while thinking, these ideas are perfect for rainy days and cold seasons.
Kids can naturally deepen their communication skills by competing with friends or working together as a team.
Preparation is simple, and you can start right away—so make recess at school or time at home even more rewarding!
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Indoor recreations that play with brains, words, and reasoning (11–20)
Word association game

It’s a simple game that doesn’t require any tools as long as you have participants and words.
As long as you have an answer word and hints associated with it, you can play using various rules.
The easiest and most straightforward rule is a quiz format where several hints are presented and players think of the answer suggested by them.
There’s also a rule where you link hints in sequence—words associated with the answer, then words associated with those, and so on—which can sometimes drift away from the original answer and makes it interesting.
It’s a fun game if you get creative about who thinks of the answers and who comes up with the hints.
A game about finding the correct moves

Act out the prompt’s movement and have others guess it.
For example, if the prompt is “forward roll,” the guesser should try various movements that come to mind.
The children around, who know the prompt, should react to each movement.
Decide in advance how to react when the movement is close to the prompt—for example, by cheering.
Using those reactions, the guesser narrows down the correct answer.
It’s also fun to have multiple guessers or to play team versus team.
You don’t need any materials, it’s a simple game, and it’s sure to get everyone excited.
Follow the clues to find the treasure!
@soramamekodomoen Treasure Hunt: Use the hints to reach the correct answer!#DaycareTreasure Hunt
♪ Original Song – Soramame Kodomo-en – Soramame Kodomo-en
All you need to prepare is paper and a pen! Here’s an idea where you follow clues to reach the treasure.
Once a teacher or guardian writes clues on pieces of paper and hides them around the room, the treasure hunt begins! It’s a simple yet wonderful game idea that brings out children’s imagination and reasoning skills.
Kids search around the room based on the hidden clues, moving forward with excitement as new hints appear one after another—it’s truly thrilling! Preparation is easy, so it’s a game you can enjoy casually with friends or at home.
Find the Snacks! Treasure Hunt Game

Work together with your friends to crack the codes! Hunt for snacks! Here are some treasure-hunt game ideas.
They’re perfect for building teamwork and reasoning skills! It’s thrilling to pool your wits to solve the ciphers and finally discover the treats.
Even in heart-pounding moments, you’ll learn to calmly interpret clues, and by collaborating toward a shared goal, you’ll naturally develop coordination and communication skills in group activities.
With clever cipher design, the fun of puzzle-solving doubles!
Drawing Shiritori

A classic pastime for killing time: shiritori.
Let’s add drawing to it and try “drawing shiritori”! You draw a picture and show it to the next person, who then draws a picture that continues from the word represented by your drawing, and shows it to the next person, and so on.
It’s a pretty tantalizing game where people might misinterpret the drawing and draw something different, or fail to get their idea across well.
It’s a game where drawing skill really matters (lol).
Without Katakana

How about “Katakana-nashi” as a simple game you can play at home? In this game, the questioner explains a katakana loanword written on a card without using any katakana, and the guessers listen to the description and try to figure out the word.
You can, of course, use the commercially available Katakana-nashi set, or make your own cards by writing katakana loanwords on pieces of paper.
It’s fun—and surprisingly challenging—to describe words you use casually every day without using katakana! It’s an easy game that both adults and children can enjoy together.
Nanjamonja Game

Nanjamonja, the game that became a hot topic after popular YouTubers made videos about it.
You play using cards featuring cute characters.
Players draw one card at a time from a face-down stack and give a name to the character that appears.
When a character that has already been named comes up again, you have to call out the name that was given to that character.
The person who says the name first gets all the cards in the pile, and the player with the most cards at the end wins.
It’s a game that tests your memory, and kids are often surprisingly good at these! It’s fun in two ways: coming up with names and remembering them.



