This article introduces ways to play with marbles! Marbles are a popular toy among children.
Many kids enjoy flicking or rolling them, and quite a few have probably made a “marble maze” for a science project.
This time, we’ll focus on classic marble games that many of you already know, and introduce a variety of fun ways to play with marbles.
Whether you want to learn how to play with marbles or you’re looking for craft ideas that use marbles, be sure to check it out!
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How to Play with Marbles (1–10)
Solitaire

Games that can be played by a single person are collectively called “solitaire,” and here is a solitaire game that uses marbles.
It is also known as “Only One.” It’s a board game played by placing marbles on a board with 33 holes.
You move a marble by jumping it over an adjacent marble into an empty hole.
The jumped marble is removed from the board.
Repeat this process, and if a single marble remains in the center of the board at the end, you clear the game.
Triangular push-out
Draw a triangle of a suitable size on the ground, and in front of it draw a line to mark the throwing spot.
Throw a marble from on the line, hit the marbles inside the triangle, and knock them out of the triangle.
All the marbles you knock out become yours.
Players take turns throwing until there are no marbles left inside the triangle.
You can also use a square, but a triangle makes it easier to knock marbles out.
Marble Maze

Create a maze out of cardboard and guide a marble to the goal—“Marble Maze.” Since you make it yourself, you can adjust the difficulty to suit your child’s age, which is a nice perk.
Using an empty box works well, too.
Add drawings or decorate with cute washi tape.
Adding traps like pits makes it more challenging and exciting.
Heaven and Hell
Make five holes in the ground: Heaven, Hell, one in the middle, and two at the edges, and draw a line in front.
Players take turns flicking a marble, sending it flying, and proceed to place their marble into the holes following a specified route.
The route is: line → Hell → middle → edge → middle → edge → middle → Heaven → middle → edge → middle → edge → middle → Hell → line → Hell.
The player who ends by landing in Hell becomes the “killer,” and if they hit another player’s marble, they get to take it.
Marble Toss

Marbles have been a traditional toy in Japan for a long time, and there are many ways to play with them.
In this version, called “marble targeting,” you line up several marbles in a single row in front of you and flick them at your opponent’s marbles.
Any marbles that fall off the table go to a draw zone, while the marbles that don’t fall are yours to keep.
The player with the most marbles at the end wins.
You can easily get started since marbles are available at 100-yen shops.
Marble run

It’s a game where you build a path for a marble using building blocks and roll the marble along it, like in “PythagoraSwitch.” You can create all kinds of courses by changing how you place the pieces, so it never gets boring.
When things don’t go well, you can try different ideas or swap parts, which makes it a good brain exercise.
There are building blocks made specifically for this game, but it’s also fun to get creative and make your own!
eyeball drop

There are many ways to play with marbles, and this is one of the traditional ones.
Scatter the marbles on the ground, and give each player five marbles.
In turn, each player drops one of their marbles from eye level.
If it hits a marble on the ground, they get to keep one.
The player who collects the most marbles wins.
Hits made after a single bounce do not count.



