There are 5 easter eggs in this portfolio  - this is #1

What happens when you want to create an easter hunt for two teenagers who are more interested in horror movies and brain rot content than they are in a garden romp with a basket of eggs? 

Instead of “forcing” the activity, you adapt it! 

I asked myself, what were the actual goals of this easter hunt? 

  1. Create a fun and memorable moment for these kids

  2. Include an opportunity for them to collaborate AND compete

  3. Have an excuse to give them an easter basket they felt like they won

This was a last minute solution to the realization that a regular egg hunt was just going to be BORING. 

It’s easy to be boring for a teenager.

So how far did I need to take this to get them engaged?

Improvising in the early hours… 

I made what turned out to be an oddly cool holiday moment.

—Found some pop-culture spooky bunny images to print out 

—Created some riddles with a logic flow between them

—Wrote them out in a joker “psychopath” kind of font

—Taped them up according to the clues all over the house

So, nothing was really hidden except the final basket, but the way to find it was a series of spooky themed clues. 

More Halloween than Easter in spirit, but

this crossover theme was a hit and a tendency I have with not only holidays, but any project or event that requires some novelty to capture the participant’s attention and interaction.