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[For Kids] Indoor Games and Activities Recommended for Winter Break

We’re introducing indoor activities for kids that are perfect for spending winter break with family and friends!

It’s important for kids to play actively outdoors even in winter, but when it’s too cold, that’s not always possible.

Plus, winter is the season when colds and other illnesses tend to spread, so to avoid getting chilled, indoor play naturally becomes more common.

So in this article, we’ve put together a list of recommended indoor activities for winter to help you when you’re wondering, “What should we do for fun during winter break?”

We’ve picked out a variety of activities, from brain games to those that get kids moving, so be sure to have fun trying them with your child!

[For Kids] Indoor Games and Recreational Activities Recommended for Winter Break (61–70)

paper airplane

[A Really Well-Flying Paper Airplane] Part 3: How to Fold & Test Flight [Easy Origami Craft] origami airplane · kmihikoki
paper airplane

Paper airplanes—hasn’t everyone, from small children to adults, played with them at least once? And they’re something people of all ages, from kids to seniors, can enjoy together.

Paper airplanes are very simple, so even those who aren’t great at origami can have fun with them, but there’s actually a lot of depth: there are many folding methods, and the distance they fly changes depending on how you fold them.

The gentle, floaty kind is nice, but the sleek, fast ones that soar far are great too.

Competing to see whose flies the farthest sounds fun as well.

invisible ink (revealed by heat); rubbings to reveal hidden text

During winter break, there are mandarins on the kotatsu table—and the peels keep piling up.

How about using those peels to play with invisible ink? Paint a picture on paper with the juice from mandarin peels, then hold it over a flame and the image will gradually appear.

Please enjoy, but be careful when handling fire.

Doodle Pancakes

[Easy at Home] I Tried Making Doodle Pancakes [Stay Home with Me]
Doodle Pancakes

How about everyone sitting around the kotatsu and making “drawing pancakes” on a hot plate? Use batter mixed with cocoa to draw the lines, then fill in the rest with plain batter.

First, try drawing a character while watching the video for reference.

Once you get the hang of it, challenge yourself with an original design!

kinetic sand

Kan, Aki, and Asahi played with kinetic sand. Have fun with kinetic sand!
kinetic sand

Are you familiar with Kinetic Sand, the sand play activity? It’s a Swedish-born indoor sand-play kit that comes in very colorful varieties.

Unlike ordinary sand, it has a unique feel—like clay, it holds together, yet even when it’s formed, it can crumble softly apart.

You can enjoy it in many ways, like pressing it into molds you’d use in a sandbox or slicing it with a plastic knife.

And despite being sand, it doesn’t make a mess indoors and won’t get your hands dirty, which is another great feature.

Trump ‘Ikkyu-san’

This is a game played with playing cards called “Ikkyu-san.” Shuffle the deck well and place it face down on the table.

Players take turns flipping one card face up into the center while calling out “Ikkyu-san.” When the card is a 1, 3, or 9, everyone must quickly place their hand on the card.

The player who is slowest to react, or whose hand ends up on top, must take all the cards in the center.

If someone slaps by mistake, they also have to take the pile.

The game continues until there are no cards left in the center.

The player with the fewest cards at the end wins.

Donjara

[Donjara] Playing nonstop with the original Donjara Doraemon for its 40th anniversary! [BanMani!]
Donjara

Donjara is a tabletop game released by Bandai.

There are versions featuring various characters, but Donjara is a tabletop game themed on the beloved national anime Doraemon.

The game is originally based on mahjong, but it’s simplified to make it easy for children to understand.

You collect tiles illustrated with characters, so both kids and adults who don’t know mahjong can enjoy playing.

The score changes depending on the combinations of images you collect.

Sinking Game

[For Childcare Workers] Teacher Rio’s Active Play That Gets Kids Excited [The Sinking Game]
Sinking Game

Watch out so you don’t get eaten by the scary shark! This is a sinking-ship game where you run back and forth on “boats” to escape the shark.

Place mats at intervals to represent the boats, and on the cue “It’s sinking!” everyone jumps to another boat.

If the person playing the shark catches you while you’re moving, you’re out.

You can add twists, like calling out other words such as “cheese” to fake people out, narrowing the boat areas, or limiting how many people can be on a boat.

Try it in a spacious indoor area or in your yard where you can run around.