Quests based on "Harry Potter"
One of the most interesting options for holding a children's birthday is the organization of a quest. Choosing a Harry Potter story as your main theme is usually a win-win.
How to Prepare?
Preparation for a quest on the theme of "Harry Potter" should begin with the choice of a venue for the holiday. It is most convenient to arrange it at home or in the country, although the option of visiting a cafe or library can also be worked out. In addition, it is important to immediately think over whether the format of the celebration is suitable for guests - it is better not to offer it to children under 10-13 years old.
Invitations, issued in the form of a ticket to the Hogwarts Express or letters to the Hogwarts school, will not be mandatory, but a very pleasant addition to the celebration, so they should be prepared in advance.
It would be good to put the invitation in an envelope sealed with a red seal and decorated with a magic badge.
Guests should definitely be warned about the required dress code. It can be both the costumes of the heroes of J.K. Rowling, and simply the images of fairy-tale characters - Mary Poppins, Baba Yaga, Jack Sparrow and others. At the preparatory stage, a treat is also thought out, which will become the final stage of the quest itself. As a basis, you can take completely ordinary dishes, but decorate them in some "magical" way. For example, “straws” and thinly sliced cheese and carrots will make very nice brooms, and canapes with sandwiches can be decorated with “spiders” made of olives.
To the place will be meat pies, Hagrid's "stone" cupcakes or a cake like Harry Potter got on his eleventh birthday. If a big feast is not planned, then you can limit yourself to a candy bar filled with glass plates with cookies, marmalade, multi-colored dragees and chocolate figurines. The best drinks are pumpkin juice, lemonade and non-alcoholic butter beer. As a musical accompaniment, it is worth picking up soundtracks for eight films about the wizard in advance.
Scenario options
The home quest should be designed in such a way as to include tasks for logic, and riddles, and competitions with dance, and some kind of mobile activity. If conditions allow - the holiday is held in the country, which means that you can go outside, then an outdoor game can become part of the quest. Props can be made with your own hands, but it is better to buy small prizes.
The quest can begin with the participants receiving a message from Hogwarts or even from Harry Potter himself., in which they are asked to help find the Horcrux or save the world from the followers of the Dark Lord. In the first case, the quest will be a search operation, and in the second option, at each stage, you will need to inscribe letters into the prepared form, as a result of which you will get a spell that drives out enemies.
The tasks themselves are formed depending on the age and composition of the guests, their interests and the personality of the birthday person himself. Kids will love a simple chemistry experiment to show invisible letters on paper in a potions room. They will also be happy to search for the code word hidden on the map of the marauders. You should definitely add a crossword puzzle with questions about the world of "Harry Potter". Active tasks are always perceived with a bang: sing a song - the Hogwarts anthem, dance the Yule Ball dance, play bowling in search of another clue, or even fight a ground version of Quidditch against a team of parents.
The task of transfiguration is carried out like a game of crocodile. All participants are divided into two teams, and then begin to pantomime characters and creatures of the Harry Potter universe. Points are awarded for each guessed word.
To "catch a dragon", the children will need to cut off opaque bags from the rope with their eyes closed, in which toy dragons and some nice souvenirs are hidden.
The route of the quest is drawn up based on the conditions of its implementation. For example, the task contained in the letter from Hogwarts will send the participants to the kitchen - to the Three Broomsticks Inn. At the next stage, you will need to find something in the closet, designated as "Disappearing closet", and then go to the living room of Gryffindor. One of the tasks may be "where Harry Potter lived before he got to Hogwarts" - that is, under the stairs.
The active stages are best done in the yard. By the way, if you make them the penultimate ones, then the parents will have time to prepare the table and gifts by the time the children return. As for the latter, “golden” chocolate galleons and chocolate frogs, themed keychains, Harry Potter-style stationery, or some “magic” trinkets are well suited. Girls will surely appreciate Luna Lovegood's jewelry. At the end of the holiday, each participant can be issued a Hogwarts graduation certificate.
Interior decoration
In order to conduct a quest based on "Harry Potter", you need to pay enough attention to the design of an apartment or house in the appropriate style. You can try to recreate one location in the wizarding world - for example, the great hall of Hogwarts or the Ministry of Magic, or add characteristic details throughout the playing space.
The quest can begin by going through a "brick" wall on a 9 platform, created from a piece of cloth with a matching pattern. The main room must be decorated with white long candles, and for safety it is better to give preference to electronic options.It's great if some of them can be brought to the ceiling, creating a levitation effect.
If there is such an opportunity, then on the walls it is worth hanging posters with images of the coats of arms of the faculties of Hogwarts and the school itself. Images of various magical creatures - centaurs, unicorns, dragons, mermaids and others will be appropriate. Another suitable and rather budgetary decoration would be ordinary envelopes, which are a reference to the episode in which Harry Potter was literally littered with letters from school. At all key points of the quest, there must be some magical attributes: a fortune-telling ball, flasks and bottles with incomprehensible contents, stuffed owls, stacks of books wrapped in aged paper and, of course, a broom.
How the holiday and quest in the style of "Harry Potter" goes, see the video below.