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50+ Easter Party Games for Adults: Drinking, Egg Hunts & Fun Ideas (2026)

Easter brunch doesn’t have to be all pastels and polite conversation. The best Easter party games for adults turn a standard holiday gathering into something people actually look forward to — think boozy egg hunts, hilarious relay races, and dare games that make your in-laws question your life choices (in the best way). Whether you’re hosting a backyard bash, a couples brunch, or a friends-only Easter rager, these 50+ adult party games will keep the mimosas flowing and the energy high. From creative twists on classic egg hunts to drinking games built for the holiday, this is your complete Easter 2026 party playbook.

1. Boozy Egg Hunt Games

The egg hunt isn’t just for kids anymore. These adult versions add liquor, dares, and stakes that make scrambling through the yard feel like a sport.

Boozy Easter Egg Hunt

Fill plastic eggs with mini liquor bottles (nips), drink vouchers, or dare cards instead of candy. Hide them around the yard or house. The person who finds the most eggs drinks the least — everyone else drinks their collection. How to play: Fill 30-50 eggs with a mix of mini bottles, dare cards, and “give a drink” tokens. Hide them. Set a 10-minute timer. Why it’s fun: The competitive energy of an egg hunt combined with the chaos of not knowing what’s inside each egg is peak adult entertainment.

Golden Egg Challenge

Hide one golden egg worth a big prize (or exemption from all dares). Everyone hunts, but the golden egg is hidden absurdly well. If nobody finds it in 15 minutes, everyone drinks. How to play: One golden egg, extremely well hidden. 15-minute time limit. Finder gets immunity or a prize. Why it’s fun: The desperation as the clock ticks down, with people tearing through bushes and checking inside shoes, is pure comedy.

Egg Hunt Sabotage

Teams of two hunt eggs, but half the eggs contain “sabotage” cards — challenges you must complete before you can continue hunting. Challenges include things like hopping on one foot for 60 seconds, singing a song, or chugging a drink. How to play: Teams hunt together. When you open an egg with a sabotage card, you must complete it before hunting more. Why it’s fun: Watching a team desperately try to finish a dare while their rivals keep collecting eggs creates beautiful chaos.

Drunk Egg & Spoon Race

Classic egg-and-spoon race, but you take a shot at the start, at the halfway mark, and before your final sprint. Dropped eggs mean you start over (after another shot). How to play: Set up a course with three drink stations. Balance a real egg on a spoon. Drop it, start over. Why it’s fun: The progressive drunkenness makes the steady-hand challenge exponentially harder — and funnier to watch.

Scavenger Egg Hunt

Each egg contains a clue leading to the next egg (think escape room meets egg hunt). The final egg has the prize. Wrong guesses or slow teams drink at each station. How to play: Create a 5-7 clue chain. Each egg has a riddle. Wrong answers = drink penalty. Why it’s fun: Solving riddles while increasingly tipsy is a recipe for hilarious wrong answers.

Blindfolded Egg Hunt

Exactly what it sounds like. Blindfolded players hunt for eggs while sighted friends shout directions — some helpful, some deliberately misleading. How to play: Blindfold hunters. Their partner guides them verbally. Allow 5 minutes. Most eggs wins. Why it’s fun: The trust (and betrayal) between partners makes this one of the loudest games you’ll play all day.

Egg Roulette

Mix hard-boiled eggs with raw eggs. Players take turns smashing an egg on their forehead. Raw egg = you drink (and wear it). How to play: 12 eggs: 8 hard-boiled, 4 raw. Take turns choosing and smashing. Why it’s fun: The nervous anticipation before each smash, followed by either relief or raw-egg disaster, never gets old.

2. Easter Drinking Games

Mimosas and Bloody Marys are great, but these games give your Easter drinks a purpose beyond “because it’s a holiday.”

Easter Movie Drinking Game

Watch a classic Easter movie (Hop, Peter Rabbit, or even The Ten Commandments) and drink on cues: bunny appears (sip), someone says “Easter” (drink), dramatic moment (shot). How to play: Create custom rules for your chosen movie. Print them out. Everyone follows along. Why it’s fun: It turns passive watching into an active group experience, and the rules get harder to follow as you drink.

Peeps Pong

Beer pong, but the cups are arranged in an egg shape and every cup has a Peep floating in it. Sink a shot? Opponent eats the Peep and chugs. How to play: Standard pong rules. Egg-shaped cup arrangement (4-3-2-1). Peep in every cup. Why it’s fun: Nobody actually wants to eat a Peep soaked in beer, which makes every successful shot a delicious punishment.

Bunny Ears

Everyone wears bunny ears. Anytime you catch someone without their ears on, they drink. Last person still wearing ears at the end of the party wins. How to play: Give everyone dollar-store bunny ears at the start. Catch earless people. Removed ears = immediate drink. Why it’s fun: The paranoia of constant ear-checking combined with people sneakily trying to remove others’ ears creates all-day entertainment.

Jelly Bean Roulette

Mix regular jelly beans with BeanBoozled (disgusting flavor) jelly beans. Players eat one — if you get a gross flavor, you drink. If you spit it out, double drink. How to play: Bowl of mixed jelly beans. Pick one, eat it, identify the flavor. Gross = drink. Spit = double. Why it’s fun: BeanBoozled flavors like “stinky socks” and “barf” create genuinely hilarious reactions.

Easter Trivia Shots

Easter-themed trivia where wrong answers earn drinks. Categories: Easter traditions worldwide, Easter candy facts, religious history, Easter movies, celebrity Easter fails. How to play: 20 questions, rotating who answers. Wrong = drink. Right = assign a drink. Why it’s fun: People think they know Easter, but questions like “What country celebrates Easter by dressing as witches?” stump everyone.

Pastel Flip Cup

Classic flip cup with pastel-colored drinks — lavender lemonade, pink mimosa, mint green punch. Teams race in a relay. Losing team does an Easter dare. How to play: Teams of 4-6. Pastel-colored drinks in cups. Standard flip cup relay. Why it’s fun: The aesthetic is adorable, the competition is fierce, and the dare stakes keep everyone invested.

Cadbury Chug

Race to eat a Cadbury Creme Egg as fast as possible — no hands. Losers drink. This sounds easy until you try to bite through chocolate with your face. How to play: Line up players, Cadbury eggs on plates. Hands behind back. First to finish wins. Why it’s fun: The mess. The desperate face-chomping. The chocolate smeared everywhere. It’s gloriously undignified.

3. Egg Decorating Competitions

Turn the classic Easter egg decorating into a competitive, adults-only experience with stakes, time pressure, and creative chaos.

Speed Egg Decorating

Two minutes to decorate an egg. Group votes on best and worst. Worst decorator drinks. Best gets to assign a dare to anyone. How to play: Provide markers, stickers, glitter, glue. 2-minute timer. Anonymous voting. Why it’s fun: The time pressure leads to hilariously bad results, and the voting creates heated debates.

Egg Decorating: NSFW Edition

Theme: decorate eggs to look like celebrities, body parts, or inside jokes from your friend group. Judged on creativity, humor, and audacity. How to play: 10 minutes, any materials. Anonymous display. Group votes with drinks as penalties/rewards. Why it’s fun: Adults given permission to be inappropriate with craft supplies create genuinely surprising art.

Blindfolded Egg Decorating

Decorate an egg while blindfolded. Your partner describes what to draw. The disconnect between instruction and execution is always spectacular. How to play: Pairs. One blindfolded, one directing. 3 minutes. Group judges. Why it’s fun: “Draw a bunny” becomes an abstract nightmare, and the reveals are always a highlight.

Egg Portrait Challenge

Draw another player’s face on an egg — without them knowing who’s drawing them. Reveal all at once. The person who can identify their own egg-portrait first wins. How to play: Secretly assign who draws whom. 5 minutes. Reveal all eggs. Players guess which is theirs. Why it’s fun: The unflattering portraits and the guessing game create layers of entertainment.

Egg Decorating Relay

Teams share one egg. Each person gets 30 seconds to add to the design before passing it. Final result is judged. The catch: no talking about what you’re going for. How to play: Teams of 4. Pass the egg every 30 seconds. No communication about design direction. Why it’s fun: One person starts a bunny, the next thinks it’s a face, and the result is abstract chaos.

4. Relay Races & Physical Games

Get everyone off the couch and into the yard with these physically ridiculous Easter-themed competitions.

Easter Bunny Hop Race

Players must hop (feet together, bunny-style) from start to finish while holding an egg on a spoon. First to cross without dropping wins. Everyone else drinks. How to play: 30-foot course. Feet together, spoon in mouth, egg on spoon. Drop = restart. Why it’s fun: Watching adults bunny-hop while desperately balancing an egg is athleticism at its most absurd.

Egg Toss Tournament

Partners toss a raw egg back and forth, stepping further apart each round. Drop it and you’re out (and soaked). Last pair standing wins. How to play: Pairs face each other. After each catch, take one step back. Broken egg = elimination. Why it’s fun: The tension at maximum distance, the spectacular egg explosions, the victory celebrations.

Bunny Suit Relay

Teams race to put on a full bunny costume (ears, tail, onesie), run to a point, take a shot, hop back, strip the costume, and tag the next person. How to play: One bunny suit per team. Run, dress, drink, hop back, undress, tag. Why it’s fun: Watching someone frantically struggle into a bunny suit while their team screams is premium content.

Egg Rolling Race

Roll a hard-boiled egg across the lawn using only your nose. First to the finish line wins. It’s harder, messier, and funnier than it sounds. How to play: 20-foot course. On hands and knees. Nose only. First to finish wins. Why it’s fun: Eggs don’t roll straight, faces get dirty, and the competitive rage over a nose-rolled egg is beautiful.

Wheelbarrow Egg Race

Classic wheelbarrow race, but the person being wheelbarrowed holds an egg in each hand. Drop either egg and you switch positions and restart. How to play: Partners: one walks on hands, one holds legs. Eggs in the walker’s hands. Why it’s fun: Coordinating a wheelbarrow race while protecting eggs tests any relationship.

Three-Legged Bunny Race

Tied together at the ankle, pairs race to collect eggs scattered across the yard. Most eggs in 3 minutes wins. Losing pair chugs. How to play: Tie pairs at the ankle. Scatter eggs. 3-minute timer. Most eggs wins. Why it’s fun: Three-legged coordination plus egg-grabbing urgency equals spectacular wipeouts.

5. Couples & Flirty Easter Games

These games are perfect for couples brunches, date nights, or any Easter gathering where a little flirtation adds to the fun.

Easter Egg Body Hunt

One partner hides mini eggs on their body (in pockets, behind ears, tucked in sleeves). The other must find them — using only their mouth. How to play: One partner hides 5 mini chocolate eggs. Other partner finds them hands-free. Timer optional. Why it’s fun: The searching process is inherently intimate and hilarious — especially with an audience cheering.

Couples Egg & Spoon Trust Walk

One partner is blindfolded, holding the egg on a spoon. The other guides them through an obstacle course using only verbal cues. Drop the egg and both drink. How to play: Obstacle course with lawn chairs, cones, etc. Blindfolded partner navigates. Drop = restart + drink. Why it’s fun: It’s a relationship stress-test disguised as a game. The arguments are half the entertainment.

Bunny Truth or Dare

Easter-themed truth or dare with escalating spiciness. Truths: “What’s the most childish thing you still do?” Dares: “Give your partner a lap dance wearing bunny ears.” How to play: Take turns drawing cards with Easter-themed truths and dares. Refuse = drink. Why it’s fun: The Easter theme gives normally awkward dares an absurd, lighthearted twist. Try Xdares for endless dare ideas!

Easter Basket Mystery

Each couple brings a sealed Easter basket with one item inside that “represents your relationship.” Everyone guesses which basket belongs to which couple. Wrong guesses drink. How to play: Couples bring baskets. Group guesses. Wrong = drink. Couple explains their item. Why it’s fun: The item reveals and explanations always lead to the best stories and roasts of the evening.

Peep Kiss Challenge

Couples must transfer a Peep from one mouth to the other without using hands. The couple that does it fastest (without dropping or destroying the Peep) wins. How to play: One partner holds a Peep in their mouth. Must transfer to partner’s mouth. Timer running. Why it’s fun: Peeps are sticky, sugar gets everywhere, and the technique discussions beforehand are gold.

Easter Would You Rather (Spicy)

“Would you rather: eat 100 Peeps in one sitting OR let your partner post your worst photo on Instagram?” Couples answer simultaneously — mismatches drink. How to play: Read questions aloud. Couples answer on 3. Mismatch = both drink. Why it’s fun: Discovering what your partner would actually choose reveals delightful (and alarming) preferences.

6. Team & Group Competition Games

Perfect for larger gatherings where you want everyone engaged and competing together.

Easter Feud

Family Feud–style game with Easter questions: “Name something found in an Easter basket,” “Name a reason someone skips church on Easter,” “Name a thing adults hate about Easter.” How to play: Two teams. Survey-style questions with pre-set top answers. Standard Feud scoring. Losing team drinks. Why it’s fun: The “survey says” format creates hilarious debates and the Easter context keeps it seasonal.

Easter Charades

Act out Easter-themed prompts: “Easter Bunny with a hangover,” “Finding out chocolate is sold out,” “Explaining Easter to an alien,” “Hiding eggs badly.” How to play: Write 20+ prompts. 1-minute rounds. Team guesses. Unguessed = drink. Why it’s fun: The specific Easter scenarios lead to incredibly creative acting choices.

Egg Stack Challenge

Stack hard-boiled eggs as high as possible in 2 minutes. Teams compete simultaneously. Collapse means you start over. Losing team does a dare. How to play: 10 hard-boiled eggs per team. 2 minutes. Highest stable stack wins. Why it’s fun: Eggs are NOT designed to stack, so the engineering debates and collapses are constant entertainment.

Easter Pictionary

Draw Easter-themed prompts: “Jesus on spring break,” “Easter Bunny at the gym,” “Peeps in a hot tub.” The absurd prompts make the drawings infinitely funnier than regular Pictionary. How to play: Standard Pictionary rules. Easter-themed prompt cards. 60-second drawing time. Why it’s fun: Some prompts are so absurd that even good artists produce hilarious results.

Egg Packing Race

Each team gets 12 eggs and random materials (tape, bubble wrap, newspaper, rubber bands). Build a package that survives a drop from 8 feet. Teams that crack drink. How to play: 5 minutes to build. Drop test. Cracked eggs = team drinks per egg cracked. Why it’s fun: Engineering under pressure with ridiculous materials creates proud inventors and spectacular failures.

Musical Eggs

Like musical chairs, but pass eggs (raw!) around the circle while music plays. When the music stops, whoever is holding an egg must answer an Easter trivia question or drink. Drop the egg? Drink double. How to play: Raw eggs circulate. Music stops. Holders face trivia or drink. Drop = double drink. Why it’s fun: The raw egg anxiety combined with trivia pressure creates delightful panic.

7. Card & Table Games

For when the weather doesn’t cooperate or you want something more low-key (but still competitive).

Easter Bingo

Create bingo cards with Easter-themed squares: “Someone mentions candy,” “A kid cries,” “Someone takes a food photo,” “Grandma says something inappropriate.” Blackout = everyone else drinks. How to play: Custom bingo cards for your specific gathering. First blackout wins. Why it’s fun: It turns passive observation into a competitive sport. Check out our bingo drinking games guide for more ideas!

Easter Never Have I Ever

Easter-themed confessions: “Never have I ever eaten an entire chocolate bunny in one sitting,” “Never have I ever peeked at my Easter basket early,” “Never have I ever lied about liking someone’s deviled eggs.” How to play: Standard rules. Easter-themed prompts. Drink if you’ve done it. Why it’s fun: The Easter-specific confessions reveal delightful childhood (and adult) secrets.

Peeps Wars

Two Peeps in a microwave. Players bet on which one expands bigger before exploding. Losers drink. Winner picks the next matchup. How to play: Two Peeps face off. Place bets. Microwave for 30 seconds. Bigger Peep wins. Why it’s fun: It’s weirdly compelling to watch marshmallow combat, and the betting adds real stakes.

Easter Heads Up!

Hold Easter-themed words on your forehead. Your team gives clues. Categories: Easter candy, Easter traditions, things at Easter brunch, Easter movies. How to play: Write words on index cards. Hold to forehead. Team gives clues. 60 seconds per round. Why it’s fun: Trying to describe “Cadbury Creme Egg” without saying cadbury, creme, or egg is harder than you think.

Egg-spionage

One person is secretly the “Egg Thief” who’s trying to subtly collect hidden tokens without being caught. Everyone else tries to identify the thief. Wrong accusations drink. Caught thief drinks double. How to play: Secret role assignment. Tokens hidden around the room. Play during other activities. Why it’s fun: The paranoia of a social deduction game layered on top of your regular party creates constant entertainment.

Easter Categories

Name items in Easter categories as fast as possible. “Easter candy brands — GO.” Hesitate or repeat and you drink. Last person standing wins. How to play: Rapid-fire category naming. Go around the circle. 5-second time limit. Why it’s fun: The pressure and speed turn simple categories into surprisingly intense competitions.

8. Creative & Wild Card Games

When you want something truly unexpected that’ll be the story people tell for Easters to come.

Easter Dare Basket

Fill an Easter basket with folded dare cards escalating from mild to wild. Players draw one each round. Refuse = double dare from the group. For the ultimate dare experience, use Xdares — the app that puts real stakes behind your dares with escrowed incentives.

Egg Russian Roulette

6 eggs, 5 hard-boiled, 1 raw. Players take turns choosing an egg and cracking it on their head. Find the raw one? You lose (spectacularly). How to play: Mark eggs secretly. Players choose one per round. Crack on head. Raw egg = lose + dare. Why it’s fun: The suspense builds with each safe crack. By the last two eggs, the tension is unbearable.

Easter Costume Contest

Provide a pile of random supplies (pastel fabric, pipe cleaners, tin foil, markers) and give teams 10 minutes to create an Easter costume on one team member. Group votes. Worst costume team drinks. How to play: Random craft supplies. 10-minute timer. One model per team. Group judges. Why it’s fun: The creativity under constraint and the final “runway walk” are always the party highlight.

Peep Jousting

Stick toothpicks in two Peeps and microwave them facing each other. The Peep whose toothpick touches the other first wins. Bracket-style tournament with drink stakes. How to play: Toothpick in each Peep, pointed at opponent. Microwave. First touch wins. Why it’s fun: Peep jousting is oddly dramatic — the slow expansion, the near-misses, the decisive contact.

Easter Confessional

Everyone anonymously writes their most embarrassing Easter memory. Read them aloud. Group guesses who wrote each one. Wrong guesses drink. Correct = assign a drink. How to play: Anonymous paper slips. Read aloud. Group votes on author. Why it’s fun: People’s Easter horror stories (childhood meltdowns, family disasters, brunch catastrophes) are always better than expected.

The Great Egg Drop

Build a contraption from household items that will protect a raw egg dropped from a balcony or second-floor window. Teams bet drinks on whose design survives. How to play: 15 minutes to build. Drop test from height. Surviving eggs win. Failed eggs = drink per crack. Why it’s fun: The engineering debates, the build chaos, and the dramatic drop moment create a perfect arc of entertainment.

How to Host the Perfect Adult Easter Party

A few tips to make your Easter party legendary:

  • Stock up on eggs: You’ll need way more than you think — hard-boiled for games, raw for roulette, plastic for hunts, and chocolate for eating.
  • Pastel drinks: Lavender lemonade, pink rosé, mint green cocktails — lean into the aesthetic. It photographs well and sets the mood.
  • Mix game types: Rotate between active (relay races), social (trivia, charades), and competitive (egg hunts, tournaments). Keeps energy from plateauing.
  • Set up a dare station: Keep an Xdares dare station going all party — anyone can send or accept dares with real stakes on the line.
  • Prepare backup indoor games: Weather happens. Have table games and drinking games ready for a Plan B.
  • Bunny ears for everyone: Dollar store bunny ears are the cheapest way to instantly make any gathering feel festive (and set up the Bunny Ears drinking game).

Make Your Easter Dares Count

Easter party games are fun, but dares with real stakes? That’s unforgettable. Xdares lets you create dares with escrowed money on the line — your friends put up real cash, you complete the dare, you get paid. It turns “I dare you” from empty words into a commitment. Whether it’s the egg roulette loser doing an embarrassing dare or the golden egg winner issuing challenges to everyone, Xdares makes every dare count. Download it and bring it to your next Easter party.

Looking for more adult party game ideas? Check out our guides to spring break party games, bingo drinking games, and Two Truths and a Lie.

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