40 Easter Party Games for Teens That Beat “Just Hanging Out”

A bright, playful illustration of a teen Easter party game fair in a sunny backyard, centered on a large decorated egg trophy on a podium, with teens competing in games around it (egg-and-spoon race, jellybean sorting, photo booth, and a scoreboard), festive bunting and balloons overhead, the title “40 Easter Party Games for Teens” on a banner at the top, and “FunAttic. Since 1998” subtly in the bottom-right corner.

Teens don’t want an “organized activity”… they want something that accidentally becomes hilarious, competitive, and worth talking about later. That’s where these Easter Party Games for Teens come in: quick rules, big laughs, and just enough chaos to keep everyone off their phones (for like… minutes at a time). 🐰🥚


Bring the candy, cue the playlist, and let the legends begin.

1. 🟢 Glow-in-the-Dark Egg Hunt (Teen Edition)

When the sun goes down, the competition turns up.

How to Play: Crack mini glow sticks and place them inside plastic eggs, then snap the eggs shut so they glow like tiny beacons. Hide the eggs around the yard or a dark room, mixing easy spots with a few “why would you put it THERE” locations. Split teens into teams and set a time limit so it stays intense and fast. Add bonus point eggs (like a gold egg worth 5) to keep everyone hunting until the last second. When time’s up, count eggs and award extra points for special eggs or funniest “find.” Finish by letting winners pick the first candy—because power is everything.


Materials: plastic eggs, mini glow sticks, candy, timer, small prize

2. 📸 Easter Photo Scavenger Hunt

This one turns your party into a mini adventure movie—starring everyone’s camera roll.

How to Play: Create a list of Easter-themed photo challenges like “selfie with something yellow,” “egg next to a snack,” or “bunny ears on the weirdest object.” Divide into teams and set clear boundaries (so nobody ends up in the neighbor’s yard doing art). Teams race to capture every item, and each photo must include at least one teammate to prove it’s legit. Add a twist by including a few “creative” prompts that require acting, like “dramatic slow-mo egg discovery.” First team to finish (or the team with the best overall photos) wins. End by letting everyone vote on funniest photo for a bonus prize.


Materials: phones, printed scavenger list, pen/marker, small prize

3. 🐰 Bunny Hop Dance-Off

It’s a dance battle… but make it Easter-level ridiculous.

How to Play: Clear a space and start a playlist with upbeat songs everyone recognizes. One person (or the host) calls out silly dance prompts like “robot bunny,” “sleepy bunny,” or “celebrity bunny at a red carpet.” Players take turns hopping into the “spotlight” for 15–20 seconds while everyone cheers and laughs. To keep it teen-approved, let them choose between performing solo or with a friend as a duo. After a few rounds, either crown a winner by applause or create categories like “Most Chaotic Energy” and “Smoothest Bunny.” Keep it short and punchy so it stays fun, not exhausting.


Materials: speaker, playlist, open space

4. 🥄 Egg Relay Race

This one is simple, competitive, and guaranteed to cause dramatic slow-motion egg drops.

How to Play: Divide into teams and set up a start line and turnaround point using cones or tape. Each player balances a plastic egg on a spoon and races to the turnaround point, then returns to tag the next teammate. If the egg falls, the player must stop, reset the egg on the spoon, and continue (or go back to the start if you want maximum chaos). Run multiple rounds so teams can redeem themselves after one tragic wobble. For an extra twist, add a “no hands” rule for fixing the egg—teammates must coach them through it. The first team to finish all racers wins and earns full bragging rights.


Materials: spoons, plastic eggs, cones or tape, timer

5. 🍬 Jelly Bean Roulette

It’s candy, but with just enough mystery to make everyone suspicious.

How to Play: Put jelly beans in a bowl and assign each color a rule, like “pick any flavor,” “must trade with someone,” or “eat two at once.” Players take turns spinning a spinner, rolling a die, or drawing a color card to determine what they have to eat. The fun is in the reactions, especially if you mix in weird flavors alongside normal ones. Add a rule that anyone who makes a dramatic face has to do a quick mini-challenge, like a bunny hop lap. Keep the pace fast so it feels like a party game, not a candy seminar. The winner can be the last person standing, or the person who survives the most “mystery” rounds.


Materials: jelly beans (mixed flavors), bowl, spinner or die, color cards (optional)

6. 🧤 Chocolate Bar Unwrap Challenge

This game is basically “who can unwrap candy while panicking” in the best way.

How to Play: Sit everyone in a circle with a wrapped chocolate bar, oven mitts, and a pair of dice in the center. One player puts on the mitts and tries to unwrap the chocolate and take a bite—using only the mitt-covered hands. Meanwhile, the player to their left rolls the dice as fast as possible until they roll doubles. Once doubles appear, the mitts and chocolate immediately pass to the dice-roller, who starts unwrapping while the next person rolls. The chaos comes from the mitts making everyone suddenly forget how hands work. Keep going until the chocolate is fully eaten, then declare the biggest biter the winner (or just honor them with respect).


Materials: chocolate bar, oven mitts, dice

7. 🎭 Easter Charades

This is the perfect mix of “I don’t want to play” and “wait, give me another turn.”

How to Play: Write Easter-themed prompts on slips of paper and toss them into a bowl. Split into teams and set a timer for 30–60 seconds per turn. A player draws a prompt and acts it out without speaking, while their team guesses as fast as possible. Use funny prompts like “bunny late for school,” “egg that won’t stop rolling,” or “chick discovering coffee.” If the team guesses correctly, they earn a point; if not, the other team can steal with one guess. Keep rounds moving quickly so nobody has time to overthink or be embarrassed. First team to a set number of points wins.


Materials: paper slips, bowl, pen/marker, timer

8. ✏️ Egg Pictionary

It’s drawing, guessing, and realizing some people should never be allowed to illustrate anything.

How to Play: Divide into teams and choose a “drawer” for each round. The drawer picks an Easter prompt and has 45–60 seconds to sketch it while their team guesses. No words, no letters, and no “accidentally” drawing the answer in Morse code. Use prompts like “golden egg,” “bunny candy thief,” or “Easter basket explosion.” If the team guesses in time, they score a point; if not, the other team gets one steal guess. Rotate drawers each round so everyone gets a turn at being either an artist or a tragedy. Play to a point goal or until the laughing gets out of control.


Materials: paper or whiteboard, markers, prompt list, timer

9. 🥚 Find the Golden Egg

This turns a normal egg hunt into a full-on treasure quest with main-character energy.

How to Play: Hide lots of regular eggs and one special “golden” egg that contains the grand prize clue. Give everyone a starting signal and let them hunt within set boundaries. To keep it fair, set a rule like “max 5 eggs per person” until everyone finds at least one. The golden egg should be challenging but not impossible—think “clever,” not “hidden in another dimension.” When someone finds the golden egg, they bring it to the host to open and claim the prize. For extra drama, add a decoy “silver egg” with a funny note like “Nice try.”


Materials: plastic eggs, one golden egg, candy, grand prize

10. 🎶 Egg Hot Potato

It’s musical chairs vibes, but with less furniture and more chaos.

How to Play: Have everyone sit or stand in a circle and start upbeat music. Players pass a plastic egg around the circle as quickly as they dare. When the music stops, whoever is holding the egg must draw a silly challenge card and do it on the spot. Challenges can be quick and teen-friendly, like “do three bunny hops,” “make your best chick sound,” or “pose like an egg on the runway.” After the challenge, restart the music and keep passing the egg. Play for a set number of rounds, or eliminate players if you want a competitive version. End by awarding a small prize to the last remaining player or the funniest challenger.


Materials: plastic egg, music, challenge cards, speaker, small prize

11. 🥤 Cup Bunny Hop Challenge

It’s a fast, silly game that makes everyone realize hopping is harder than it looks.

How to Play: Set up a stack of plastic cups at the start line and mark a finish line across the room. One player at a time must “bunny hop” forward while placing cups down in a straight path, one per hop, without using their hands to move their body forward. After placing several cups, they must step only on the cups to reach the finish line, like the floor is lava (because obviously it is). If they miss a cup or step on the floor, they reset to the start and try again. Run it relay-style with teams, or time each player for the fastest run. Add a bonus round where they must do it while holding a plastic egg for extra panic. Fastest time wins and gets instant bragging rights.


Materials: plastic cups, tape (for lines), timer

12. 🎯 Carrot Toss

This one is quick to set up and instantly turns into a competitive scoreboard obsession.

How to Play: Place several buckets or bowls at different distances, and assign each one a point value based on difficulty. Players stand behind a throw line and toss toy or foam carrots, trying to land them in the buckets. Give each player a set number of throws (like five) to keep the game moving. Add a “golden bucket” worth extra points so comebacks are always possible. If you want team energy, have teammates cheer or heckle politely (aka dramatically). After everyone plays, total the points and crown the Carrot Toss Champion.


Materials: toy or foam carrots, buckets or bowls, tape (throw line), score sheet, pen

13. 🐰 Bunny Ears Ring Toss

It looks harmless… until everyone becomes weirdly serious about landing a ring on someone’s head.

How to Play: Pick one player to wear bunny ears (headband style) and stand still like a noble statue. Other players take turns tossing rings toward the bunny ears from a marked line. Each ring that lands on an ear earns points, and you can add bonus points for “double ring” moments. Rotate the bunny model every few turns so everyone gets a chance to be both target and thrower. To keep it fair, adjust the distance based on skill level—because some teens are secretly ring-toss professionals. After a set number of rounds, tally points and announce the winner with dramatic fanfare.


Materials: bunny ear headbands, rings (or glow necklaces), tape (throw line), score sheet

14. 🥚 Egg Toss (Plastic Edition)

This is a classic party game that gets more intense with every step back.

How to Play: Pair up players and give each pair a plastic egg. Partners stand close together and gently toss the egg back and forth, catching it cleanly. After each successful catch, both partners take one step backward to increase the challenge. If the egg drops, that pair is out (or they lose a point and keep playing if you want more rounds). Keep going until only one pair remains, or until everyone is laughing too hard to throw accurately. For a twist, make the final round “non-dominant hand only.” Winning pair earns the title of Most Coordinated Humans Alive (for today).


Materials: plastic eggs, open space, tape (optional boundary)

15. 🕵️ Easter Egg Riddle Hunt

It’s like an egg hunt, but with puzzle energy that feels slightly like a movie montage.

How to Play: Hide the first egg in an easy spot, and place a riddle inside that leads to the next egg’s location. Continue the chain with each egg containing the next clue, gradually getting trickier as players warm up. Teens can play solo or in teams, but teams tend to get more dramatic and competitive (in a fun way). Set boundaries and a time limit so the hunt doesn’t turn into a full neighborhood expedition. The final egg should contain a grand prize or a clue to where the prize is hidden. First person or team to solve the final clue wins and gets the ultimate Easter victory moment.


Materials: plastic eggs, printed riddle clues, pen/marker, grand prize

16. 🧠 Egg Carton Memory Game

This is a quick brain game that turns into “wait… I KNOW that was there” immediately.

How It Works: Place a dozen plastic eggs in an egg carton, and hide a small item under each egg (or under just some of them for extra difficulty). Let everyone study the open carton for 20–30 seconds like they’re cramming for a test they didn’t study for. Close the carton or cover it, then ask questions such as “What was under the blue egg?” or “Which egg had the keychain?” Players answer one at a time, and correct answers earn points. If someone gets it wrong, another player can steal the point by guessing correctly. After a few rounds, switch the items around to reset the chaos and give everyone a fresh chance. Highest score wins, and the winner is officially the party’s human memory vault.


Materials: egg carton, plastic eggs, small items (coins, erasers, keychains), timer (optional)

17. 🥕 Carrot Tower Challenge

This one is part engineering, part snack temptation, and part “why is this actually hard?”

How It Works: Divide everyone into teams and give each team a pile of carrots and connectors (like toothpicks or mini marshmallows). The goal is to build the tallest free-standing tower before time runs out. Teams can design any structure they want, but it must stand on its own for at least 10 seconds to count. Add a rule that only one person can touch the tower at a time to keep the teamwork spicy. When time is up, measure each tower and gently test stability with a tiny table tap (no sabotaging). If a tower collapses during measuring, the team gets one quick rebuild chance. Tallest standing tower wins, and everyone suddenly respects carrots more than they did an hour ago.


Materials: carrots, toothpicks or mini marshmallows, timer, measuring tape

18. 🚪 Mini Easter Escape Room

This activity makes your party feel like a mission—without anyone needing to crawl through vents.

How It Works: Create a simple puzzle trail using clues hidden around one room that lead to a final “prize egg.” Start with an easy clue so teams get moving quickly, then increase difficulty with riddles, simple ciphers, or matching patterns. Split teens into small teams and set a time limit so the game stays exciting and doesn’t turn into a three-hour mystery novel. Each clue should clearly lead to the next location, like “Look where snacks live” or “Check under something that spins.” Add one “decoy clue” that’s funny but harmless to keep things unpredictable. The first team to find and open the final egg wins the prize and earns serious mastermind status.


Materials: plastic eggs, clue cards, envelopes (optional), grand prize, timer

19. 🔐 Egg Code Breakers

This is a puzzle game that makes everyone feel smart… even when they’re absolutely guessing.

How It Works: Write codes on paper slips and hide them inside eggs, with each code translating to a letter, word, or location. Teams collect eggs and work together to decode the message—like matching colors to letters or using a simple substitution key. Give every team the same decoder sheet so it’s fair, but make them earn it by solving a quick starter clue. As they decode, they’ll uncover a final phrase that leads to a hidden prize egg. Encourage teams to assign roles (reader, writer, solver) so the game stays organized instead of turning into a shouting match. The first team to decode the final message and reach the prize wins. Bonus points if they dramatically announce the decoded phrase like it’s a movie reveal.


Materials: plastic eggs, printed codes, decoder sheet, pens, prize egg

20. 🐣 Easter Would-You-Rather Line Game

This activity is instant laughs and low-pressure—perfect for teens who “don’t play games” (but do).

How It Works: Mark two sides of the room as Option A and Option B, then read out Easter-themed would-you-rather prompts. Players choose a side and move there fast, then a few volunteers explain their choice like they’re defending a thesis. Keep prompts fun and teen-friendly, like “Chocolate eggs forever or gummy bunnies forever?” or “Egg hunt in the dark or egg hunt in the rain?” Throw in a few weird ones to spark arguments in the best way, like “Be a bunny for a day or be an egg for a day.” If a prompt is too hard, allow a “middle zone” for the indecisive people (they know who they are). After 10–15 prompts, take a quick vote for the funniest argument and give that person a small prize. It’s basically social energy in game form.


Materials: tape (optional for sides), prompt list, small prize (optional)

21. 🧺 Capture the Egg

This game is pure teamwork, strategy, and friendly chaos with a candy-powered goal.

How to Play: Split everyone into two teams and designate two “home bases” on opposite sides of the yard or room. Each team hides a set number of plastic eggs in their base area, and the goal is to steal the other team’s eggs and bring them back to your base. Players can tag opponents in a shared “battle zone,” sending tagged players to a short timeout spot or “jail.” Teammates can free players by tagging them, which instantly turns the game into dramatic rescue missions. Set a time limit so it stays intense, then count stolen eggs at the end. The team with the most eggs (or the first to steal a golden egg) wins and celebrates like champions.


Materials: plastic eggs, tape or cones (boundaries), timer

22. 🏃 Egg Hunt Speed Run

This is an egg hunt built for competitive teens who treat everything like a race.

How to Play: Hide a large batch of eggs before the game starts, making sure they’re spread out across the playing area. Explain clear boundaries and a strict time limit so everyone hunts fast instead of casually strolling. To keep it fair, add a rule like “no more than 8 eggs per person” until everyone has at least one. Include a few bonus eggs that are worth extra points, like a gold egg (5 points) or a rainbow egg (3 points). When the timer ends, everyone returns to a central spot to count eggs and add up points. Highest score wins, and the winners get first pick of the candy stash.


Materials: plastic eggs, candy, timer, bonus eggs (optional)

23. 🎨 Egg Decorating Speed Round

This activity is creative, fast, and surprisingly competitive once the timer starts.

How It Works: Give each teen an egg (plastic or hard-boiled) and announce a theme like “meme egg,” “celebrity bunny,” or “galaxy Easter.” Set a 10–12 minute timer so nobody overthinks it and the energy stays high. Everyone decorates as quickly as possible using whatever supplies are available, and they can add ridiculous details for extra laughs. When time is up, line the eggs up like an art gallery and let everyone do a quick walk-by viewing. Vote on winners in fun categories like “Funniest,” “Most Aesthetic,” and “Most Unhinged.” Hand out small prizes, then let people take their eggs home like tiny chaotic trophies.


Materials: plastic eggs or hard-boiled eggs, markers, stickers, paint (optional), paper towels, timer, small prizes (optional)

24. 🎳 Sock Bunny Bowling

This one is easy to set up and instantly turns into a “just one more round” situation.

How to Play: Set up “pins” using empty bottles or plastic cups in a triangle at the end of a hallway or open space. Create a “sock bunny” by rolling a sock into a ball and adding quick ear shapes with rubber bands or paper (or just call it a bunny and commit). Players take turns rolling the sock bunny from behind a line, trying to knock down as many pins as possible. Give each player two rolls per turn like real bowling, then record their scores. Add a bonus rule: knock down the “gold pin” (one labeled cup) for extra points. After a few frames, the highest score wins and gets crowned Bowling Bunny Champion.


Materials: socks, empty bottles or plastic cups, tape (throw line), marker (for pin labels), score sheet, pen

25. 🐇 Bunny Tail Target

This is a quick, funny target game that gets competitive way faster than expected.

How It Works: Tape a large paper bunny to a wall and mark where the tail should go with a circle or target zone. Give each player a cotton ball “tail” and a strip of tape (or use double-sided tape already on the cotton). Players stand behind a line and toss or stick their cotton tail onto the bunny while aiming for the target. If you want extra laughs, have players wear oven mitts while placing the tail, because coordination disappears instantly. Everyone gets a set number of turns, and the closest tail to the target earns the most points. After all rounds, declare a winner and admire the bunny’s wildly inaccurate new look.


Materials: paper bunny poster, tape or double-sided tape, cotton balls, marker, tape (throw line)

26. 🧩 Easter Puzzle Relay

This game is a team race that feels like a TikTok montage of teamwork… and mild panic.

How to Play: Split into teams and give each team the same small puzzle (or cut a picture into equal pieces for each group). On “go,” the first player runs to the puzzle table, places one piece, and runs back to tag the next teammate. Only one player can touch the puzzle at a time, which makes strategy weirdly important. If a player forces a piece, the team must do a quick penalty (like three bunny hops) before continuing. Keep the pace fast by using a simple 24–48 piece puzzle, not a 1,000-piece emotional journey. The first team to complete their puzzle wins and celebrates like they just won a championship.


Materials: identical small puzzles (or printed picture cut into pieces), table space, timer (optional)

27. 🥚 Egg Basket Relay

This is a classic relay, but with enough wobble to keep everyone screaming.

How to Play: Set up a start line and a turnaround point, then give each team a basket filled with plastic eggs. One player carries the basket to the turnaround point and back, then hands it to the next player. The twist is that if an egg falls out, the runner must stop and pick it up before continuing. To make it harder, add obstacles like weaving around cones or stepping over a pool noodle. Teams will quickly learn that speed means nothing if your basket is spilling like a broken vending machine. After every player has completed a run, the first team finished wins. Bonus: make the final runner wear bunny ears for maximum drama.


Materials: baskets, plastic eggs, cones or obstacles, tape (lines)

28. 🧠 Easter Trivia Showdown

This game makes teens competitive over facts they did not know five minutes ago.

How to Play: Divide into teams and read Easter-themed trivia questions out loud, one at a time. Teams must buzz in (or raise hands) to answer, and correct answers earn points. Mix easy questions with a few tricky ones so everyone has a chance to win and nobody rage-quits. Add a fun twist by including “bonus eggs” where a correct answer lets the team pick an egg containing extra points or a silly challenge. Keep rounds quick, and don’t let anyone argue with the host—this is trivia, not court. After a set number of questions, the team with the most points wins and gets the prize.


Materials: trivia questions, paper for scorekeeping, pen, small prize, plastic eggs (optional)

29. 🎤 Easter Lip Sync Battle

This turns your party into a mini concert where nobody has to actually sing (thank goodness).

How to Play: Put teens into pairs or small groups and have each pick a song to perform. Give them a few minutes to plan a simple routine, props optional but encouraged. One at a time, groups perform while everyone else cheers like they’re in the front row of a stadium. Judges (or the crowd) score performances based on energy, creativity, and commitment—not vocal talent, because we’re pretending to sing. Keep it moving by limiting each performance to 60–90 seconds. End with fun awards like “Most Iconic,” “Funniest Performance,” and “Best Dramatic Slow-Mo.” Winners get small prizes and unlimited confidence for the rest of the day.


Materials: speaker, playlist, timer, small prizes (optional)

30. 🕺 Bunny Freeze Dance

This is a guaranteed laughter game because everyone thinks they’re a great dancer… until freeze time.

How to Play: Start upbeat music and let everyone dance freely, but with one rule: every move must include some kind of bunny hop or bunny-themed motion. Randomly pause the music, and when it stops, everyone must freeze instantly in whatever pose they’re in. Anyone who moves after the freeze is either out, loses a point, or has to do a quick silly challenge—your choice. Keep rounds short and frequent so the game stays exciting and unpredictable. Add special rounds where you call out a theme like “sneaky bunny” or “robot bunny” before restarting the music. The last player remaining (or the one with the most points) wins and earns the title of Freeze Dance Legend.


Materials: speaker, playlist, open space

31. 🏅 Easter Medal Dash

This game is a fast-paced sprint challenge with just enough silliness to keep it fun.

How to Play: Set up a short race course with a start and finish line, then add a few simple stations along the way. At each station, players must complete a tiny Easter task like “do five bunny hops,” “balance an egg for five seconds,” or “say ‘Happy Easter’ in a dramatic movie voice.” Players race one at a time, and their total time includes station tasks, so speed and control both matter. If someone skips a station, add a time penalty to keep it fair. Run two rounds so players can try to beat their own best time and build hype. The fastest overall time wins the “Easter medal” and the right to flex forever.


Materials: timer, tape or cones, printed station tasks, small prize (optional)

32. 🥚 Egg Balance Obstacle Course

This game turns walking into a high-stakes mission that will absolutely cause laughter.

How to Play: Create a simple obstacle course using chairs, cones, or tape lines that players must follow. Each player holds a spoon with a plastic egg and must complete the course without dropping it. Add easy obstacles like weaving, stepping over a line, or doing a slow 360-degree turn at a checkpoint. If the egg drops, the player returns to the previous checkpoint and continues from there. Time each run for a competitive version, or run it as a relay race with teams. For a final twist, make the last round “non-dominant hand only,” which instantly levels the playing field. Fastest time (or first team done) wins.


Materials: spoons, plastic eggs, cones or chairs, tape, timer

33. 🎯 Egg Basket Beanbag Toss

This is a simple target toss game that gets intense when someone starts racking up points.

How to Play: Place baskets at different distances, and assign each one a point value based on difficulty. Players toss “egg beanbags” (or small soft balls) into the baskets from behind a throw line. Give each player five throws, then rotate so everyone gets a fair turn. Add a “gold basket” worth extra points to keep the scoreboard exciting. If you want a team mode, have teammates alternate throws and combine scores. After everyone plays, total the points and crown the winner with dramatic announcer energy. It’s quick, competitive, and oddly addictive.


Materials: baskets, beanbags or soft balls, tape (throw line), score sheet, pen

34. 🐣 Chick Walk Challenge

This is a goofy movement game that’s low-effort but high-laughter.

How to Play: Mark a start and finish line and explain the only way to move: the “chick walk,” aka tiny fast steps with elbows tucked like wings. Players race one at a time, staying in character the entire run. If someone breaks into a normal walk, they must stop and do three bunny hops before continuing. Run multiple heats so everyone gets another shot after realizing how weirdly hard it is. For an extra twist, add a short turnaround point so they have to pivot while still chick-walking. The fastest chick wins and gets crowned with a silly title like “Supreme Chick.”


Materials: tape (start/finish lines), timer (optional), open space

35. 🎲 Easter Candy Draft

This game combines mini-competition with the ultimate prize: first pick of the candy.

How It Works: Set out a table of candy prizes and create a simple point system using quick party challenges. Teens earn points by winning short rounds of games like rock-paper-scissors, mini trivia, or a 10-second balancing challenge. After a few rounds, rank everyone by points from highest to lowest. In that order, players take turns choosing one candy item at a time from the table, like a draft. To keep it exciting, do multiple draft rounds so even lower-ranked players still get good options. End when the candy is gone, and watch how serious everyone becomes about snack strategy. It’s part game, part negotiation, and 100% teen-approved.


Materials: assorted candy, score sheet, pen, small challenge list

36. 🥚 Egg Stack Showdown

This game looks easy for five seconds… and then it humbles everyone.

How to Play: Give each player a pile of plastic eggs (or egg halves) and a flat surface to build on. Set a one-minute timer and have them stack eggs as high as possible without the tower falling over. If the stack collapses, they can rebuild, but the timer keeps running—no emotional breaks. Add suspense by calling out time warnings like “10 seconds left!” so everyone starts panic-stacking. When time is up, measure each stack from table to top egg and record the height. Run a second round so players can try to beat the top score and get a redemption arc. Tallest stack wins and becomes the official Egg Architect.


Materials: plastic eggs, timer, measuring tape (optional)

37. 🎈 Egg Pop Balloon Rush

This is loud, fast, and absolutely chaotic in a way teens weirdly love.

How to Play: Put small paper slips inside balloons, then inflate them and scatter them around the play area. Divide teens into teams and explain that each slip contains either points, a task, or a clue. On “go,” players must pop balloons (sitting, stomping, or squeezing—no sharp objects) to collect slips for their team. Some slips give points, while others force silly challenges like “bunny hop for 10 seconds” before continuing. Keep the game moving with a time limit so it stays exciting and doesn’t become balloon warfare. When time is up, teams total their points and complete any remaining tasks. Highest score wins, and everyone’s ears ring with victory.


Materials: balloons, paper slips, marker, timer, point list

38. 🐰 Bunny Ears Team Relay

This one is a relay race with a hilarious “you must wear the ears” rule that makes everything better.

How to Play: Split into teams and give each team a pair of bunny ears. The first player puts on the ears and races to a turnaround point, then returns and tags the next teammate. The bunny ears must be passed along like a sacred object—no running without them. If the ears fall off, the runner must stop, fix them, and continue, which creates instant comedy. Add a rule that the runner must do three bunny hops at the turnaround point before heading back. Run until every teammate has completed the course. First team finished wins and gets to declare themselves the Ultimate Bunny Squad.


Materials: bunny ear headbands, tape or cones, open space, timer (optional)

39. 🧺 Easter Basket Dunk

This is a target game with big “arcade vibes,” and it gets competitive fast.

How to Play: Place a basket on the ground and mark several throw lines at different distances. Players toss plastic eggs (or soft balls) into the basket, earning more points for farther lines. Give each player a set number of throws per round so everyone gets a fair chance. Add a bonus rule where landing three in a row earns extra points, because streaks make everything more dramatic. Rotate through players quickly to keep the energy up and prevent boredom. After a few rounds, total the scores and crown the winner. The champion gets a prize and an unreasonable amount of confidence.


Materials: basket, plastic eggs or soft balls, tape (throw lines), score sheet, pen

40. 🏆 Mega Prize Egg Finale

This is the grand finale game that feels like the ending of a movie—except with candy.

How to Play: Prepare one large “mega” egg that contains the grand prize clue or a prize ticket inside. Gather everyone and announce a final quick challenge, like a 30-second mini relay, a trivia lightning round, or a single-shot target toss. Each player earns one chance to win the mega egg by completing the challenge successfully. If multiple players succeed, they go into a sudden-death round that escalates the drama (and the cheering). Keep the finale fast so the excitement stays high and nobody checks their phone mid-moment. The final winner opens the mega egg and claims the prize like a champion. End with a group photo, because the victory deserves documentation.


Materials: large plastic egg, grand prize, challenge cards, timer, small props (depending on challenge)

If your Easter party ends with candy trades, victory speeches, and at least one person insisting they were “robbed,” congratulations—you did it right. Pick a few favorites from these Easter Party Games for Teens, mix in snacks, and you’ve got a party that feels less like an event and more like a highlight reel. 🐣✨

Now go forth and host the Easter chaos your teens secretly crave.
0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *