Coordinate your reunion theme, schedule, and signups in one place. Reunifyr lets you publish the schedule, collect RSVPs by activity, and share the photos afterward.

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The best reunions have a theme, a few structured activities, and a lot of unstructured time. Below are 30 ideas across themes, ice breakers, group games, and kid-friendly options — pulled from what real organizers say worked.

10 Reunion Themes That Work

  1. Decade Throwback — pick a decade (1970s, 1990s, etc.); guests dress, music matches, photo wall.
  2. Heritage Spotlight — celebrate one branch’s country of origin with food, music, and a brief talk.
  3. Backyard BBQ Classic — checkered tablecloths, lawn games, casual food, no pretense.
  4. Tropical / Luau — leis, fruit platters, tiki torches, summer playlist.
  5. Sports Day — color-coded teams, t-shirts, friendly tournaments.
  6. Movie Night Under the Stars — outdoor screen, popcorn, blankets — works for evening.
  7. Carnival / County Fair — booths, simple games, ticket-style prizes for kids.
  8. Roaring ’20s — flapper attire, jazz playlist, photo booth with props.
  9. Around the World — different rooms or tables represent countries the family has lived in.
  10. Color Wars — assign branches a color; everyone wears it; group photos pop on social.

8 Ice Breakers for the First Hour

  1. Family bingo — print cards with squares like “knows three languages,” “has lived overseas,” “is the youngest sibling.”
  2. Photo scavenger hunt — take a selfie with someone you have not seen in 5 years.
  3. Name-tag with origin city — instant conversation starter.
  4. Memory wall — sticky notes: “favorite reunion memory” goes on a board.
  5. Heritage trivia — 10 questions about your family history, prize for top score.
  6. Two truths and a lie — family edition.
  7. Guess whose baby photo — collect photos in advance, post them numbered.
  8. Family tree puzzle — print large blank tree, guests fill in branches with their kids’ names.

6 Group Games and Activities

  1. Cornhole tournament — bracket-style, takes 90 minutes for 16 players.
  2. Tug-of-war — siblings vs. cousins works well.
  3. Talent show / open mic — younger kids especially love this.
  4. Family Feud — write 5 survey questions in advance, run two teams.
  5. Outdoor scavenger hunt — works at parks, campgrounds, beaches.
  6. Storytelling circle — older relatives share a memory; record audio with permission.

6 Kid-Friendly Activities

  1. Bounce house — $150–$400 rental, occupies kids for hours.
  2. Craft station — friendship bracelets, picture frames they decorate.
  3. Water balloon toss — only at outdoor venues, bring lots of towels.
  4. Face painting — hire a local artist or DIY with kid-safe paint.
  5. Kids’ Olympics — sack race, three-legged race, egg-and-spoon, prizes for everyone.
  6. Movie corner — projector and a kids’ movie for when the heat hits.

What Makes Activities Actually Happen

Posting a schedule on the door is not enough. Three things keep activities on track:

  • Pre-RSVP by activity. Know who is in for the cornhole tournament before the day starts.
  • Assign one owner per activity. Not “the family” — one person, by name.
  • Publish the schedule somewhere everyone can see all weekend — not just a printed program that gets lost.

A central reunion site beats group texts and Facebook events for this. Guests check a single page; you update it once and everyone sees the change.

After the Reunion

Two things separate reunions people remember from ones they forget:

  1. Photos in one place — not scattered across 30 phones and one Instagram post that disappears.
  2. A short recap — who came, what we did, what the kids loved. This becomes the seed for next year’s planning.

Ready to publish the schedule and collect RSVPs by activity? See plans at Reunifyr →