30 Easter Team Building Games: Big Bunny Energy, Zero Awkwardness
GamesIf your team could use a little boost (and a lot more laughing), these Easter team building games are here to save the day—no forced small talk, no “share your fun fact” trauma, just egg hunts, silly challenges, and wholesome competition that turns coworkers into teammates and teammates into suspiciously strategic bunny athletes. 🐰🥚
Consider this your permission slip to be delightfully ridiculous.
1. 🥚 The Great Egg Pass (No Hands Allowed)
A fast, funny relay that turns teamwork into controlled chaos.
How to Play:
Split into teams and line up shoulder-to-shoulder. Give the first person a plastic egg and explain the rule: no hands allowed at any time. Players must transfer the egg down the line using only their body (chin, neck, elbow, shoulder—whatever works). If the egg drops, the team restarts from the beginning or takes a time penalty, depending on how spicy you want it. The first team to successfully pass the egg to the last person wins. For an extra challenge, have teams run it twice and try to beat their own time.
Materials:
Plastic eggs
2. 🐰 Bunny Hop Line-Up
A silly sorting challenge that forces quick communication and coordination.
How to Play:
Divide participants into teams of 6–12 people. Announce a category they must line up by, such as birthday month, time at the company, or alphabetical first name. The catch is that everyone must bunny hop while they organize themselves. Set a time limit (like 60–90 seconds) to keep things moving and funny. Once a team believes they’re in the correct order, they freeze in place and you verify the lineup. Award points for correct order and bonus points for the team that finishes first.
Materials:
None
3. 💛 Eggcellent Compliments
A quick, uplifting activity that boosts team morale without getting too serious.
How It Works:
Before the event, write compliment prompts on slips of paper and place them inside plastic eggs. Examples include “Thank someone for helping you recently” or “Compliment someone’s strength at work.” Participants sit or stand in a circle and take turns choosing an egg to open. They read the prompt out loud and complete it by directing the compliment to a specific person. Keep the pace light and encourage genuine, specific praise rather than generic compliments. Continue until everyone has received at least one compliment. End by asking the group how it felt to give and receive positive feedback.
Materials:
Plastic eggs, paper slips, pen
4. 🏗️ Peep Tower Challenge
A sweet construction game where teams build big dreams out of tiny sugar birds.
How to Play:
Split everyone into small teams and give each team the same amount of Peeps (or marshmallows) and toothpicks. Explain that the goal is to build the tallest freestanding tower within a set time limit, like 8–10 minutes. Teams must plan quickly, test stability, and adjust as the structure starts leaning like it has opinions. When time is up, measure each tower from base to highest point without holding it. If a tower collapses right before judging, it still counts as “a valuable lesson.” Crown the winning team and let them do a victory hop.
Materials:
Peeps or marshmallows, toothpicks
5. ⏳ The Egg Timer Story
A rapid-fire storytelling game that makes everyone laugh and stay engaged.
How to Play:
Gather teams in a circle and set a timer for 45–60 seconds. One person starts telling an Easter-themed story, making it up as they go. When the timer goes off, the next person must immediately continue the story exactly where it left off. Players cannot pause to plan, and they must keep the story moving even if it becomes completely ridiculous. Continue until everyone has added at least one segment to the story. To wrap up, have one person deliver a dramatic “final ending” in 20 seconds for extra flair.
Materials:
Timer (phone works)
6. 🍬 Jellybean Draft
A strategy game where teams compete for the best candy “roster.”
How to Play:
Split everyone into teams and place a shared bowl of mixed jellybeans in the center. Assign point values to each color (for example, red = 5, green = 3, yellow = 1) and display the scoring clearly. Teams take turns drafting one jellybean at a time, choosing carefully based on points and scarcity. Keep the draft moving with a short time limit per pick so it stays lively. When all beans are drafted or the round ends, teams total their points and announce their score. Play multiple rounds and let teams adjust strategy as they learn which colors are “high value.”
Materials:
Jellybeans, point-value chart (paper or whiteboard)
7. 🕵️ Egg Mystery Swap
A quick improv activity that turns random objects into hilarious “products.”
How It Works:
Beforehand, place a small random item inside each plastic egg, like a paper clip, coin, button, or tiny toy. Divide participants into teams and have each team select an egg without opening it at first. On “go,” teams open their egg, reveal the item, and get 2–3 minutes to create a product pitch around it. They must invent a product name, target audience, and a key benefit that makes the item sound life-changing. Each team presents their pitch in 30–60 seconds, and the group votes on funniest, most convincing, or most absurd. Rotate and play again with new eggs to keep the creativity flowing.
Materials:
Plastic eggs, small random items, timer
8. 🎨 Bunny Ears Pictionary
A classic drawing game made better by bunny ears and questionable art skills.
How to Play:
Split into teams and prepare a list of Easter-themed prompts ranging from easy to silly. One player from a team puts on bunny ears and becomes the artist for that round. The artist draws the prompt while their team guesses within a set time limit, usually 60 seconds. No letters, numbers, or speaking—only frantic doodling and dramatic pointing. If the team guesses correctly, they earn a point and the next team goes. Rotate artists each round so everyone gets a turn, even the people who draw stick figures like they’re under pressure (because they are).
Materials:
Bunny ears, paper or whiteboard, markers, prompt list, timer
9. 🎳 Egg Roll Bowling
A simple indoor competition where eggs become bowling balls and laughter becomes inevitable.
How to Play:
Set up “pins” using plastic cups, empty bottles, or small boxes at the end of a hallway or open room. Mark a rolling line on the floor with tape so everyone rolls from the same spot. Teams take turns rolling an egg toward the pins, trying to knock down as many as possible in one roll. Keep score like bowling or just count total pins per team over multiple rounds. If you’re using hard-boiled eggs, remind everyone to roll gently unless you want abstract art on the floor. The team with the highest total pins wins the round and earns bragging rights until lunch.
Materials:
Plastic or hard-boiled eggs, cups or bottles (pins), tape (optional)
10. 🥇 The Golden Egg Case File
A mini mystery hunt that combines clue-solving with competitive teamwork.
How to Play:
Hide one “golden egg” somewhere in the space before the activity begins. Divide participants into teams and give each team the first clue, written as a riddle or a simple puzzle. When a team solves a clue, they bring the answer to the host to receive the next clue. Incorrect answers either send them back to rethink or trigger a small penalty like a 5-second bunny hop. Keep the clues progressing from easy to slightly tricky so momentum stays high. The first team to find the golden egg wins, and everyone else suddenly realizes they should’ve checked behind the obvious plant.
Materials:
One golden egg, printed clues, pens (optional)
11. 🧺 Basket Build-Off
Teams engineer a DIY Easter basket using random supplies and a lot of optimism.
How to Play:
Split into teams and hand each team the same pile of random supplies. Explain that their basket must hold as many eggs as possible and survive a short carry test. Give teams 10–12 minutes to design, build, and reinforce their “basket” while assigning roles like builder, tester, and timekeeper. When time is up, teams load eggs one by one until the basket fails, tips, or drops eggs. Run a quick carry test by having one teammate walk 10 steps with the basket to confirm it’s truly functional. The team that safely holds the most eggs wins and gets to act like they totally planned it that way.
Materials:
Paper, tape, rubber bands, cardboard, string, plastic eggs or hard-boiled eggs, scissors
12. 💼 Eggshell Negotiations
A team decision game where groups bid for advantages like they’re negotiating a blockbuster deal.
How to Play:
Give each team an equal budget of tokens or points. Present an “auction menu” of advantages like extra time, a hint, a clue swap, or the ability to block another team once. Teams must discuss and agree on each bid before placing it, which forces quick collaboration. Run the auction in rounds so teams must choose between saving their budget or making bold moves. After the auction, immediately use the purchased advantages in a short follow-up challenge like a mini hunt or puzzle. The team that uses their resources best wins, and the team that hoarded tokens learns a valuable lesson about fun.
Materials:
Tokens or point cards, auction menu list, pens, timer
13. 🥄 Egg-on-a-Spoon Relay
A classic relay race that proves balance is a team sport (and also a personal struggle).
How to Play:
Split into teams and set up a start line and turnaround point. Each player must carry an egg on a spoon to the turnaround point and back, then hand off the spoon to the next teammate. If the egg falls, the runner must stop and return to the start line or take a short penalty loop. Encourage teams to cheer, coach, and share tips like “tiny steps” and “don’t panic.” Continue until every teammate has completed a leg of the relay. The first team to finish wins, and the slowest team wins… character development.
Materials:
Spoons, plastic eggs or hard-boiled eggs, cones or tape for markers
14. 🥚🏃 Egg Hunt Sprint + Strategy
A fast-paced egg hunt where teams must choose between speed, points, and not missing the obvious hiding spot.
How to Play:
Before starting, hide eggs around the area and place point values inside each one. Explain that some eggs are low points and easy to find, while a few high-point eggs are harder to spot. Teams get a set time limit, like 8–10 minutes, to collect as many points as possible. Teams must decide whether to spread out, assign zones, or have one “point captain” coordinating the hunt. When time ends, teams open eggs and total their scores together. The highest score wins, and any team that forgot to count gets to practice counting as their next team-building activity.
Materials:
Plastic eggs, point-value slips, pens, timer
15. 🐇🏷️ Bunny Tag: Safe Zones
A playful chase game that builds quick thinking, teamwork, and a surprising amount of cardio.
How to Play:
Mark several “safe zones” around the play area using cones, paper signs, or taped squares. Choose one or two players as taggers, and everyone else starts spread out in the space. Players can run freely, but they may only stay in a safe zone for a short count (like 5 seconds) before moving again. If a player is tagged, they either become a tagger or complete a quick Easter challenge like three bunny hops to rejoin. Rotate taggers every 2–3 minutes so everyone gets a turn in both roles. The game ends when the group is laughing too hard to run in a straight line.
Materials:
Cones or floor tape, timer (optional)
16. 🥄🎯 Egg Catapult Challenge
Teams build a simple launcher and learn quickly that “physics” has a sense of humor.
How to Play:
Divide everyone into small teams and give each team the same building supplies. Mark a launch line and place a target zone a short distance away, adjusting distance based on space and skill level. Teams have 10 minutes to build a mini catapult and test-launch an egg toward the target. After building time, each team gets a set number of official launches, like five attempts. Award points for landing in or closest to the target, and bonus points for the most creative design. Encourage teams to assign roles like builder, launcher, and retriever so everyone stays involved.
Materials:
Plastic eggs, spoons, rubber bands, popsicle sticks, tape, target markers, and etc.
17. 🐰🛤️ Bunny Trail Obstacle Course
A team relay obstacle course that mixes movement, mini-challenges, and nonstop cheering.
How to Play:
Set up several simple stations in a loop, such as hopping through hoops, weaving cones, balancing an egg, and solving a quick riddle. Split into teams and explain that each teammate must complete the full course before tagging the next person. Add a small task at one station that requires teamwork, like two teammates carrying an egg together for five steps. If someone drops the egg or misses a station, they must redo that portion before continuing. Keep the pace energetic by using a timer and announcing remaining time for each team. The first team to finish cleanly wins, and the loudest cheering team wins the unofficial trophy.
Materials:
Cones, hoops, plastic eggs, riddle cards, tape, timer, and etc.
18. 🥕 Capture the Carrot
A fast, strategic team game where one carrot causes 100% more competitive spirit.
How to Play:
Create two “bases” on opposite sides of the playing area and place a carrot object in the center. Split into two teams and have players start at their base lines. On “go,” players try to grab the carrot and bring it back to their base without being tagged. If a carrier is tagged, they must drop the carrot where they were tagged and return to their base before rejoining. Teams can protect the carrier by blocking (without contact) and distracting defenders with decoy runs. Play best-of-three rounds so teams can adjust strategy and redeem themselves dramatically.
Materials:
Carrot object (cone or plush), cones or tape for bases, and etc.
19. 🎨🥚 Egg Decorating (With a Theme)
A creative team activity that sparks collaboration, jokes, and surprisingly serious design debates.
How It Works:
Assign each team a theme such as “movie characters,” “company values,” “future inventions,” or “if our team was a dessert.” Give teams a set time limit to plan and decorate their eggs together, encouraging them to coordinate colors and ideas. Teams can divide tasks by having one person sketch concepts, another handle details, and another manage supplies. When time is up, each team presents their egg set and explains how it fits the theme in a short, fun showcase. Let the group vote on categories like funniest, most creative, and most on-theme. Wrap up by taking a quick photo lineup of all eggs for a “gallery” moment.
Materials:
Hard-boiled eggs or plastic eggs, markers, paint, stickers, glue, paper towels, and etc.
20. 🐇🖍️ Build a Bunny (Blind Instructions)
A communication challenge where one person “sees the truth” and everyone else draws chaos.
How to Play:
Pick one person per team to be the “describer” and show them a bunny reference image that no one else can see. The rest of the team gets paper and markers and must draw the bunny based only on the describer’s instructions. The describer cannot gesture, point, or reveal the image—only verbal directions are allowed. Give teams 3–5 minutes to draw, encouraging the describer to be specific about shapes, placement, and proportions. When time is up, reveal the reference image and compare it to each team’s drawing for maximum laughs. Award points for closest match, funniest result, and best teamwork under pressure.
Materials:
Bunny reference image, paper, markers, timer, and etc.
21. 😂🐰 Easter Meme Studio
A creative game where teams turn everyday work moments into Easter-themed memes.
How to Play:
Split into teams and give each team a set of meme templates or prompt cards. Prompts can be things like “When someone says ‘quick question’ at 4:59 PM” or “When you find the last chocolate egg.” Teams have 8–10 minutes to create 2–3 memes that match the prompts, adding captions and punchlines together. Encourage teams to assign roles like writer, editor, and “does this make sense?” reviewer. When time is up, each team presents their memes to the group like they’re unveiling fine art. Vote on categories such as funniest, most relatable, and most chaotic. The winning team gets bragging rights and the losing team gets… character growth.
Materials:
Meme templates (printed or digital), pens/markers or laptops/phones, timer, and etc.
22. 📣🧺 The Basket Ad Campaign
A pitch game where teams invent a brand-new Easter basket product and sell it like a late-night commercial.
How to Play:
Divide participants into teams and assign each team the challenge of creating a totally new “Easter basket” product. They must come up with a product name, slogan, target customer, and three key features that make it irresistible. Give teams 10 minutes to brainstorm and prepare a short pitch, including a dramatic tagline or mini commercial scene. Each team presents for 60–90 seconds while the rest of the group acts as “investors.” After all pitches, hold a quick vote on categories like best slogan, funniest pitch, and most likely to accidentally become real. For extra fun, require each pitch to include one awkward testimonial like “I couldn’t stop buying baskets, help.”
Materials:
Paper, markers, timer, and etc.
23. 🏛️🍡 Marshmallow Sculpture Museum
A build-and-present activity where teams create “art” out of marshmallows and confidently explain what it means.
How It Works:
Split into teams and give each team marshmallows and toothpicks. Teams have 10 minutes to build a sculpture that can stand on its own, using any design they want. Encourage them to plan first, test stability, and then add dramatic “details” like arches, towers, or abstract wobble sections. When time ends, each team becomes a museum guide and gives their sculpture a title and a short description. Presentations should include at least one sentence explaining the “deeper meaning,” even if the deeper meaning is “we panicked.” Vote on categories like most creative, most stable, and best museum speech. Finish by doing a slow “gallery walk” so everyone can admire the chaos up close.
Materials:
Marshmallows, toothpicks, timer, and etc.
24. 🥚📝 Egg Quote Wall
A feel-good activity where everyone cracks an egg and adds a message to a shared wall of vibes.
How It Works:
Prepare paper slips with uplifting or funny “fortune egg” messages, or have participants write their own. Place the slips inside plastic eggs and mix them in a basket. One by one, participants choose an egg, open it, and read the message out loud. After reading, they tape the message to a wall or board to create a growing “quote wall.” Encourage people to react, laugh, and add quick follow-up comments like “that is so you.” Keep going until everyone has contributed at least one message to the wall. At the end, take a photo of the wall and let people pick a favorite quote to carry into the day.
Materials:
Plastic eggs, paper slips, pens, tape, board or wall space, and etc.
25. 🥚🖥️ Virtual Egg Hunt (Screenshot Edition)
A remote-friendly search game that turns your screen into an Easter scavenger hunt.
How to Play:
The host shares a busy image on screen, such as a cluttered desk photo or a custom slide filled with small objects. Hidden within the image are tiny egg icons or Easter items that participants must spot. Split players into teams using breakout rooms or keep it free-for-all in the main call. Set a timer for 2–3 minutes and have teams list every egg they find, noting the location (“top left near the mug,” etc.). When time is up, teams report their findings and the host confirms correct answers. Award points per egg found, plus bonus points for the most accurate descriptions.
Materials:
Hidden-object image or slide, timer, and etc.
Now go forth and hop your way to legendary team vibes.



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