[For Seniors] Simple Tabletop Games: Fun and Engaging Recreational Activities
Looking for games that get everyone buzzing around the table? This time, we’re introducing fun table games you can enjoy together with seniors.
From homemade hockey and billiards to seasonal taste-pickup and clam-digging games, there are tons of clever ideas everyone can enjoy! The lineup ranges from activities that use your fingertips to full-body challenges.
Enjoy a variety of games that will lift your spirits and energize your body while deepening connections with friends.
Interesting Table Games (1–10)
Wobbly Beanbag Game

This is a game where you carefully pick up beanbags one by one from a wobbly plate without dropping any.
Place a plastic tray on a cardboard tube from a roll of plastic wrap, then pile lots of beanbags on top.
It’s very unstable, so you’ll be on edge wondering when it might lose balance and topple over! Your score is the number of beanbags you successfully take.
If it falls and the beanbags collapse, you’re out.
Table hockey

This is a game where, like air hockey, you rally a puck with an opponent facing you and aim to shoot it into the area in front of them.
To help the puck slide smoothly, the entire field is made of cardboard, and the striking tools are made from items like milk cartons, designed to be lightweight and durable.
Because the goal is to shoot the puck so your opponent can’t react, players should pay close attention to the power and speed of their shots.
Deciding where to aim when putting power into a shot also exercises strategic thinking, making it a game that trains both the body and the mind.
Clam-Digging Game

Let’s enjoy clam digging right on the table! Fill a container with plenty of thinly cut newspaper strips, and bury inside some clam stand-ins—make-asari and hamaguri—from cardboard or similar material.
Using a rake made from wire, see how many clams you can find and collect within the time limit.
It could be fun to assign different point values to hamaguri and asari, too.
Evil Spirit Banishment Game

It’s a game where you use a fan to quickly remove a plastic bag—illustrated with an evil spirit—that’s covering a plastic bottle with a photo attached to it.
Players must carefully figure out what angle and force to swing the fan to generate wind, and how to direct that wind to affect the bag.
If you put a photo of someone close to you on the bottle, the desire to “banish the evil spirit” for them might make the game even more exciting.
If you make it a versus match, players can see the opponent’s situation, which encourages greater focus on speed and fan control—highly recommended.
Fukuwarai (a traditional Japanese “lucky laugh” face-making game)

Fukuwarai is a classic New Year’s game.
It’s fun not only for children but also for adults and seniors.
You place facial parts one after another onto a sheet of paper with a blank, featureless face drawn on it.
The person placing the parts is blindfolded and, guided by someone beside them telling them which part they’re holding, relies on their own sense to position the pieces on the blank face.
When it’s finished, will it look like a proper face—or a hilarious jumble? The reveal is what gets everyone laughing in this delightful game.
Crumple up the newspaper and toss it.

Toss rolled-up newspapers into the opposing team’s zone! In a regular ball-toss game you pick up balls and throw them into a basket, but this game starts by rolling newspaper sheets into balls.
Take the newspapers laid out on the table, roll them up, and throw them not into the box in front of you, but into the box in the opposing team’s area.
If ones that miss are thrown back and end up in the box in your own area, you lose points, so accurate throws are key.
Because it involves rolling, throwing, and picking up, the game incorporates a variety of movements that provide stimulating exercise for both the brain and body!
Billiards Challenge

Some of you may have tried real billiards, where you strike a ball with a cue to hit another ball.
This game focuses on that cue-striking motion, testing how well you can control the stick.
The goal is to hit a set ball with the cue and make it strike a target that earns points, adjusting your power and angle through repetition.
Once you get used to sending the ball straight, we recommend adding obstacles to make control more challenging.


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