A playful printable game with clue cards (4–5 clues per fruit) and matching answer flashcards with fruit pictures — perfect for storytime, learning centers, or family playtime.
Engage children in critical thinking and vocabulary building with this simple, replayable activity. Each fruit has a short series of clues — players guess the fruit.
📚 How to play
Scatter all the fruit answer flashcards face-up on the floor or table. Keep the “Who Am I?” clue cards in a pile.
- 1. A player picks the top “Who Am I?” card and reads the first clue aloud.
- 2. Based on the clue, players remove the fruit flashcards that do not match.
- 3. Read the next clue and again remove the unrelated fruit cards.
- 4. Continue step by step until only one fruit card remains — that’s the answer!
This elimination method keeps the game interactive and helps children practice reasoning while narrowing down their choices.
🎲 Alternative Way to Play
Instead of reading clue cards, this version works like a fun question game:
- 1. One player secretly thinks of a fruit.
- 2. The opponent asks yes/no questions (e.g., “Is it a red fruit?”).
- 3. Depending on the answer, the opponent removes unrelated fruit cards.
- 4. Players keep asking questions until they guess the fruit correctly.
- 5. The winner is the one who can find the answer in the fewest questions!
🎯 What’s included
- ✔️ Clue cards — 4–5 clues per fruit (print and cut)
- ✔️ Answer cards — picture + word for each fruit
- ✔️ PDF ready for printing (two layouts: teacher-friendly and flashcard-friendly)
- ✔️ Bright, kid-friendly design — print on cardstock & laminate
Tip: Print answer cards with pictures on thicker paper so kids can hold them up to check answers without tearing the clue cards.
🖨️ Printable formats included
- A4 sheet
- Flashcard sheet — 8 cards per page (clues or answers)
- Picture-only answer cards for quick checking
📥 Download & Print
Get the free printable PDF with clue cards and answer cards:
👉 Download Fruits Game PDF — FREE
Teacher idea: Mix the clue and answer cards into two stacks. Ask students to draw one from each stack and explain why they are a match — great for reasoning and speaking practice.
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