10 Best Board Games for Family Game Night (Ages 5–10)

Family game night sounds great in theory.

Until someone doesn’t understand the rules. Or gets upset from losing. Or walks away halfway through.

I’ve been there more times than I’d like to admit.

The difference isn’t whether you play — it’s what you choose to play. The right game keeps everyone at the table. The wrong one ends the night early.

For kids aged 5–10, the sweet spot is simple rules, short play time, and just enough interaction to keep everyone involved. Every game on this list hits that mark.

Our list of board games

01
Ticket to Ride: First Journey
Simple routes, clear goals, just enough strategy
Best for
Ages 6+
Players
2–4
Play time
20–30 mins
Difficulty
★★☆
Text-heavy
Low
Why it works

Kids collect coloured cards and claim train routes across a map. The goals are visual and clear — connect two cities, complete the route, score the points. There’s just enough decision-making to feel satisfying without tipping into overwhelm. A great first step into proper strategy games.

Parent tip: First Journey is the kids’ version — don’t accidentally buy the full adult edition. The box looks similar but the rules are much more complex.

02
Outfoxed!
Work together to catch the fox
Best for
Ages 5+
Players
2–4
Play time
20 mins
Difficulty
★☆☆
Text-heavy
Minimal
Why it works

Everyone plays on the same team — no one gets singled out for losing. Players collect clues together and vote on who stole the pie. The deduction is gentle and visual, so adults can guide younger kids without taking over. Great for families who want less rivalry at the table. More cooperative games for kids →

Parent tip: Perfect for kids who take losing hard — when everyone wins or loses together, the emotional stakes feel much lower.
A child's hand moving a meeple game piece on the Outfoxed! board game

03
Rhino Hero
The tower always falls at the worst moment
Best for
Ages 5+
Players
2–5
Play time
10–15 mins
Difficulty
★☆☆
Text-heavy
None
Why it works

Build a card tower, move the rhino higher, try not to be the one who brings it all down. Physical and silly in equal measure — and when the tower collapses, the reaction is always laughter rather than frustration. Rounds are short enough to play again immediately. See Rhino Hero in our family game night list →

Parent tip: Play on a hard flat surface — carpet makes the cards wobble too much and the tower collapses almost immediately.
Family laughing and reacting as the Rhino Hero card tower topples during a game

04
Guess Who?
Yes or no — that’s all you need
Best for
Ages 5+
Players
2
Play time
10–15 mins
Difficulty
★☆☆
Text-heavy
Minimal
Why it works

Simple yes/no questions make this one of the easiest games for younger kids to grasp immediately. Does your person have glasses? Flip them down. Has a hat? Flip them down. The process of elimination feels satisfying even before you get to the final guess.

Parent tip: Great one-on-one game for a parent and child — works especially well as a wind-down activity before bed.

05
Dinosaur Escape
Save the dinosaurs together
Best for
Ages 5+
Players
2–4
Play time
15–20 mins
Difficulty
★☆☆
Text-heavy
None
Why it works

Players work together to rescue dinosaurs before the volcano erupts. Cooperative from start to finish — no one gets eliminated, no one loses alone. Especially good for kids who get upset when they lose, since the win or loss belongs to the whole group. More cooperative games for kids →

Parent tip: A great choice if you have a sensitive child at the table — cooperative games take the emotional pressure off completely.
Here you go:
Alt text: Three happy kids playing Dinosaur Escape board game together

06
Junior Scrabble
Light learning that doesn’t feel like homework
Best for
Ages 6–7+
Players
2–4
Play time
20 mins
Difficulty
★★☆
Text-heavy
Medium
Why it works

The junior version uses picture tiles alongside letters, so kids who are still early readers can participate without frustration. Spelling practice sneaks in naturally — kids are focused on playing, not on getting things right. A nice one for families with a mix of reading levels at the table.

Parent tip: Let younger kids use the picture side of the board and older kids use the word side — keeps it fair across different ages.
Three kids playing Junior Scrabble together at home

07
Connect 4
Quick rounds, easy resets, surprisingly strategic
Best for
Ages 5+
Players
2
Play time
10 mins
Difficulty
★☆☆
Text-heavy
None
Why it works

Drop a disc, block your opponent, line up four. Simple to explain in under a minute but genuinely strategic once kids start thinking ahead. Rounds finish fast, reset in seconds, and the “one more game” pull is strong. A reliable fallback that never really gets old.

Parent tip: Let younger kids win occasionally — not every time, but enough to keep their confidence up while they’re still learning to think ahead.

08
Zingo!
Fast-paced matching that keeps attention high
Best for
Ages 5+
Players
2–6
Play time
10–15 mins
Difficulty
★☆☆
Text-heavy
Low
Why it works

Slide the Zingo zinger, two tiles pop out, race to claim the ones that match your card. No waiting for turns — everyone is watching and reacting at the same time. Fast enough to hold the attention of easily distracted kids, easy enough that no one feels left behind.

Parent tip: Works well with a bigger group — up to 6 players without slowing down, which makes it one of the better options for playdates or family gatherings.

09
Labyrinth
The board changes every single turn
Best for
Ages 7+
Players
2–4
Play time
20–30 mins
Difficulty
★★☆
Text-heavy
Low
Why it works

Players shift the maze tiles before every move, constantly reshaping the paths. No two games ever look the same. Kids stay engaged the whole time because the board is always changing — and just when someone thinks they’ve found the perfect route, someone else shifts it away.

Parent tip: Better for ages 7+ — younger kids find the shifting maze mechanic tricky to visualise. Worth waiting until they’re ready rather than forcing it early.
Four colourful meeples on the Labyrinth board game maze

10
The Game of Life Junior
Light, colourful, and easy to follow
Best for
Ages 5–8
Players
2–4
Play time
20 mins
Difficulty
★☆☆
Text-heavy
Low
Why it works

Spin the wheel, move along the path, collect stars and pets along the way. The storyline is simple and cheerful — kids follow along easily without needing much guidance. Low pressure from start to finish, which makes it a reliable choice when you want a calm, easy game night.

Parent tip: Good closer game — play this last when energy is winding down. It’s calm enough to ease kids towards bedtime without a fight.

💡 What I’ve Learned (Real Talk)

Not every game night needs to be perfect.

Some nights:

  • you stop halfway
  • you switch games
  • you just laugh and move on

👉 That’s still a win.

Because what kids remember isn’t the game.

It’s that you sat down and played with them.

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