Camp directors plan activities months in advance — and still watch half of them fizzle by 10 a.m. The craft table clears out. The relay races lose steam after round two. But laser tag? That's the activity where counselors have to pull campers off the field when time runs out.
It works because the game adapts to whoever is playing. A cabin of eight-year-olds runs a completely different kind of match than a group of teenagers — same gear, same arena, totally different energy. Younger campers play it like a giant game of tag. Older campers turn it into a full tactical operation. And mixed-age groups? They surprise everyone when the smaller kids outmaneuver the big ones behind the bunkers.
Our setup handles camps with over 200 players in a single day using rotations and multiple game formats. The energy doesn't dip between rounds — it builds. Every rotation brings fresh matchups, new teams, and another chance to be the hero of the game.
Kids go home and tell their parents it was the best day of camp. That's the kind of activity that fills your enrollment next summer.