No phones. No tablets. No small people staring silently into the glowing rectangle.

Screen-Free Children's Activity Guide

Enter the children's ages, choose a group preference, and get practical entertainment ideas using ordinary things found around the house, garden, car, holiday home or granny's kitchen drawer.

Use one age or several ages separated by commas. Best range: 2 to 16.
Used only as a light guide. Every activity can suit any child.
Optional. This is especially useful when AI suggestions are enabled.

The grown-up survival guide

1. Keep a boredom box

Fill it with paper, crayons, tape, playing cards, old magazines, balloons, string, dice, pegs, plastic cups, chalk and a few charity-shop surprises. Rotate the contents so it feels new.

2. Give them a mission

Children often respond better to a challenge than a suggestion. Try: build a bridge, host a cafe, design a zoo, invent a sport, make a map, create a quiz, solve a mystery.

3. Mix calm and chaos

Start with movement, then switch to drawing, stories, food prep or quiet competition. It prevents the living room becoming a soft-play centre with better curtains.

4. Make ordinary jobs theatrical

Sorting socks becomes a shop. Making lunch becomes a restaurant. Tidying up becomes a treasure hunt. The trick is not more stuff; it is a better story.