Printable Maze Games for Children and Adults

Beautiful & Printable
Maze Games for Kids and Adults

Printable maze games are a great pass time for adults and kids alike! They can be a lot of fun and they’re also a great way to challenge the brain.

These printable maze games we have created will improve the eye-hand coordination, help your focus, improve your sense of direction, help with your memory and so much more! 

 

All these mazes have a start and a finish. You start at the arrow and make your way to the end of the maze. All you have to do is download the PDF and start printing the mazes.

Are you ready to start exploring the wonderfull world of mazes? We heard it’s a-maze-ing*! So put on your explorer hats, pick up a pencil and start to find your way out. Don’t get lost in there!

Some a-maze-ing* examples

  • 19 mazes on 9 pages (A4 format)
  • PDF size: 5 MB
  • Ranges from easy-peasy-lemon-squeazy to difficult
  • Saves Ink Toner (Black & White only)
  • 1 – infinite ∞ players (print once for every player)

TRY ALL OUR PRINT & PLAY GAMES

Mazes can be played anywhere and at anytime… These labyriths are a-maze-ing!* Use them in school, in long car rides, as part of a quiz, in a waiting room, while doing a real physical maze… As long as you can hold a pencil and a piece of paper, a maze will always come in handy. 

Print them twice to make maze solving into a competition: the first person to solve the maze wins! The winner gets to say “I’m a-maze-ing” or choose another corny (!) joke involving mazes. 

* I hope we knocked the a-maze-ing joke out of the park!

Maze Rules for friendly competitions

1. Start the competition by having competitors sit across from each other. They should all be holding the exact same set of printable mazes. They start with a short stare down, flexing their eyebrows and showing off their hand-pencil coordination. 

2. An independent player yells out: “start your mazes!” and both players put their pencil at the starting arrow

3. The independent player counts down and yells out “START”: all players start racing their pencils towards the finish. 

  • If a player makes a mistake they can turn back
  • players can’t go through walls
 
4. The first player to finish a maze yells out: “I’m a-MAZE-ing” and puts special dad-joke-emphasis on the ‘maze’ part, as to accentuate the punchline. The scores then get counted:

  • +1 point for each finished maze
  • -1 point if a player fails to finish a maze
  • -2 points for going through walls
 
Optional prizes for maze winners: printable mazes, a mace, a compass, an explorer hat, a lengthy wire and/or bag of bread crubms, a GPS-device or a trip to Knossos in Greece.