Degen Dad — Crypto, Parenting, Life

Activities / 5-year-old

Play Ideas for Dads with 5 Year Olds

Five-year-olds are basically real people now. They can play real games, follow complex rules, hold conversations about the universe, and challenge you in ways that are genuinely impressive. They still think you're the coolest but peer relationships are becoming important. Use this time wisely - dedicated dad play at five builds a bond that carries through the harder years ahead.

What kids this age are like

At five, kids can read simple words, write their name, count past 20, and understand concepts like time and money. They can sustain attention for 20-30 minutes, work cooperatively, and handle both winning and losing (mostly). They're developing a sense of humor, moral reasoning, and genuine interests. Their fine motor skills handle scissors, crayons, and small building pieces with confidence.

Showing 18 of 18 activities

Chess Basics

indoorNo mess

Start with how each piece moves. Play simplified games - pawns only, then add pieces gradually. Five-year-olds can absolutely learn chess and the strategic thinking it builds is incredible. Don't let them win every time - they need to develop real skills.

Time: 20-30 minSupplies: chess set

Comic Book Creation

indoorNo mess

Fold paper into panels and create a comic book together. Decide on a character, a problem, and a solution. They draw the pictures, you help with words (or they sound them out). Staple it together and they've published their first book.

Time: 25-30 minSupplies: paper, markers or crayons, stapler

Lego Free Build Challenge

indoorNo mess

Set a theme and a time limit. Build the best spaceship, tallest skyscraper, or scariest monster you can in 15 minutes. Compare builds and vote on a winner. Five-year-olds can follow complex Lego instructions now too.

Time: 25-30 minSupplies: Lego bricks, timer

Treasure Map Creation and Hunt

bothNo mess

Draw a detailed treasure map together with landmarks, an X-marks-the-spot, and a compass rose. At five they can follow and even create their own maps. Hide real treasure (small toy or treat) and navigate the map to find it.

Time: 25-30 minSupplies: paper, markers, small treasure to hide

Magic Tricks Workshop

indoorNo mess

Teach them 3-4 simple magic tricks - the disappearing coin, the card force, the cup and ball trick. Practice until they can perform for the family. Five-year-olds love the power of knowing a secret that amazes adults.

Time: 20-30 minSupplies: coins, cards, cups, small balls

Video Game Co-op

indoorNo mess

Play age-appropriate co-op video games together. Mario Kart, Minecraft (creative mode), or Lego games are perfect. Limit screen time but when you play together, you're bonding and they're building problem-solving skills. No competitive online gaming yet.

Time: 25-30 minSupplies: gaming console or tablet, age-appropriate games

Spy Code Breaker

indoorNo mess

Create coded messages using simple ciphers - A=1, B=2 or picture codes. Write secret messages for each other to decode. Five-year-olds love secret communications. Graduate to invisible ink (lemon juice revealed by heat) for extra spy cred.

Time: 20-25 minSupplies: paper, pencils, code key, lemon juice (optional)

Stratego or Connect 4 Tournament

indoorNo mess

Graduate to more strategic board games. Connect 4, Guess Who, and Battleship are perfect for five. Play a best-of-five tournament with a bracket. They're learning strategy, critical thinking, and how to handle competition.

Time: 25-30 minSupplies: board games (Connect 4, Guess Who, Battleship, etc.)

Stop Motion Movie

indoorNo mess

Use a phone and action figures or Lego minifigs to make a stop motion movie. Move the figures slightly, take a photo, repeat. Use a free stop motion app to compile the photos. Five-year-olds can direct and you'll both be amazed at the result.

Time: 25-30 minSupplies: phone with stop motion app, action figures or Lego minifigs, stable surface

Indoor Nerf War

indoorLow mess

Build barricades from couch cushions, establish bases, and have a full Nerf battle. Set rules - no head shots, reload in your base, three hits and you're out. It's active, strategic, and an absolute blast. Eye protection recommended.

Time: 20-30 minSupplies: Nerf guns and darts, couch cushions for barricades, safety glasses

Geocache or Letterbox Hunt

outdoorNo mess

Find geocaches in your area using an app. Navigate together using the map, solve clues, and find hidden containers. Sign the logbook and trade small trinkets. At five they understand maps and the real-world treasure hunt is thrilling.

Time: 25-30 minSupplies: phone with geocaching app, small items to trade, pen

Science Fair Project

bothLow mess

Pick a question - 'Which paper airplane design flies farthest?' or 'Does music help plants grow?' - and test it. Record results on a poster board. Five-year-olds can do real experiments with real data. Plus they get practice presenting findings.

Time: 25-30 minSupplies: poster board, markers, materials for chosen experiment

Would You Rather Marathon

bothNo mess

Take turns asking increasingly absurd 'would you rather' questions. Would you rather have a pet dragon or be invisible? Would you rather eat only pizza or only ice cream forever? The conversations reveal how they think and they're genuinely funny.

Time: 15-20 min

Craft Store Build

indoorLow mess

Go to a craft store together and pick out one project to build - a model airplane, a jewelry kit, a painting set, or a woodworking starter project. Work on it together. Five-year-olds love the 'real' feel of a purchased project kit.

Time: 25-30 minSupplies: craft kit from store

Escape Room at Home

indoorNo mess

Create a simple escape room with locks (combination, key, directional), hidden clues, and puzzles. They need to solve each puzzle to get the next clue. End with a locked box containing a prize. Five-year-olds are smart enough to solve real puzzles.

Time: 25-30 minSupplies: combination lock, key lock, clue cards, envelopes, prize

Talent Show Prep

indoorNo mess

Help them prepare an act for a family talent show - a song, a dance, a joke routine, a magic trick, or a gymnastics demonstration. Practice together, work on stage presence, and perform for the family. Five-year-olds are natural performers.

Time: 25-30 minSupplies: costume pieces, props as needed, music (optional)

Cardboard Arcade

indoorLow mess

Build arcade games from cardboard boxes - a skee-ball ramp, a claw machine (toilet paper tube grab claw), a basketball toss, a pinball machine. Each game gets its own box. Use tickets (paper strips) and a prize counter.

Time: 30 minSupplies: cardboard boxes, tape, markers, small balls, paper for tickets

Restaurant Critic Night

indoorMedium mess

Cook dinner together, set the table fancy (tablecloth, candles, nice plates), and have your kid rate the restaurant experience - food, service, ambiance. Give the 'restaurant' a name and make a menu. They take the review extremely seriously.

Time: 30 minSupplies: cooking ingredients, table setting items, paper for menu and review

Survival Tips

  • #1Five-year-olds can handle real challenges. Don't dumb everything down - give them problems that make them think and stretch. They rise to the occasion.
  • #2Start traditions now. Weekly game night, Saturday morning hikes, Sunday cooking - routines they associate with 'dad time' become anchors they remember forever.
  • #3Listen to what they're interested in and go deep. If they love space, get a telescope. If they love bugs, get a bug kit. Showing interest in THEIR interests is the ultimate connection move.
  • #4They're starting school and navigating social dynamics. Play time is when they process friendship issues, classroom stress, and big feelings. Keep the door open by keeping play time consistent.
  • #5You're building a foundation right now. Every game you play, every project you build, every adventure you go on - they remember this stuff. Be present. Put the phone down. Be here.