Traditional Halloween Party Games

Holidays & Special Occasions Halloween Traditional Halloween Party Games

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      Liss

      Traditional Halloween Party Games

      Bob for Apples

      Take a tub and fill with water and apples. Each child takes turn trying to get an apple out of the tub without using their hands. Make sure to supply towels as this gets pretty messy.

      Pass the Orange Halloween Party Game
      Have the children line up in two lines with equal amount of children. Each person at the beginning of the line gets an orange and they hold the orange under their chin. They must pass the orange to the person behind them without using their hands.

      If the orange is dropped, it goes back to the beginning of the line. The first team to get the orange to the last player in the line, wins.

      Pass The Pumpkin Halloween Game
      Have the children sit in a circle. Start music and have them pass a small pumpkin around the circle. When the music stops, the one that is caught with the pumpkin is out.

      Continue to you have a winner.

      Make A Mummy Party Game
      Divide the children into two groups (or three groups if it is a large Halloween party). Select one from each group to be the mummy. Give each group a roll of toilet paper.

      When you say “go” each group wraps toilet paper around the mummy child. The first group that emptys their roll of toilet paper wins. You can also give a prize to the best wrapped mummy.

      Halloween Freeze Dance
      – Play Halloween party music or creepy sound effects and tell the children to dance.
      When you turn off the music, they all need to freeze.

      Whoever is caught moving during the freeze is out of the game. The last person dancing, wins. For a fun variation on this game, tell the children they will need to pose in the Halloween shape you will have called out during the previous freeze.

      Some fun shapes could be: black cat; pumpkin; broomstick; mummy; bat; etc.

      Killer
      – I always loved playing this game when I was a kid. The children should be old enough to be able to wink in order to play this game. Have the children sit in a circle.

      Make them close their eyes and you will tap “it” on the shoulder. When the children open their eyes, “it” will need to wink at different kids in the circle without anyone but the selected child seeing the wink. When a child has been winked at, he or she can make a big effect of dying.

      The object of the game is for the other children to guess who the “killer” is. Whoever guesses, or is the last person not dead becomes the next “killer”.

      Make the Zombies Laugh – Tell all the children to lie still on the floor like a zombie. Select one child to be “it”. That child’s job is to make the other children laugh.

      “It” can make funny faces, dance, act silly, whatever inspires him or her. Once a “zombie” laughs, he or she can join “it” in attempting to make the group laugh. Whoever holds out the longest without laughing is the winner.

      Pass the Pumpkin – This game is a variation on “hot potato”. Seat the kids on the floor in a circle. Give them a small pumpkin to pass around.

      Play Halloween party music as they pass the pumpkin, and periodically stop the music. Whoever is holding the pumpkin is out. The game continues until one person is left with the pumpkin.

      Pin the Nose on the Pumpkin – Tack a large cardboard pumpkin to a wall. In turn, blindfold each child and give them a black cutout shape of a nose with double-side tape on the back. Have them walk up to the wall and pin the nose on the pumpkin.

      Trick-or-Treat Memory Game – In turn each child begins by saying “I went trick or treating and I collected…”, and then in alphabetical order each child adds to the list. Naturally, each subsequent child needs to add to the list and repeat the letters prior to his or her turn. For example, the third child might say, “I collected C – a cat; B – a Bat; A an apple. Friends can help with this game, otherwise it wouldn’t be fair to the last person.

      Left and Right Pumpkin Story – Create a Halloween story that repeatedly uses the words “left” and “right”. For example, “On Halloween night, Susie left for trick or treating. Right away she ran into her friend Billy as she made a right turn at the corner.

      He was holding his trick or treat bag in his right hand.” At your party, have the children sit in a circle and give one of them a pumpkin. As you read the story, they need to pass the pumpkin to the person seated next to them as the words left or right are spoken.

      Read the story quickly and watch them giggle as they try to keep up with the directions.

      Pumpkin Penny Toss – Carve out a large pumpkin, making a wide opening at the top. Give each child a handful of pennies. Have them stand an appropriate distance from the pumpkin and try to toss the pennies in, one at a time.

      For each successful toss, give the child a small piece of Halloween candy.

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Holidays & Special Occasions Halloween Traditional Halloween Party Games