May 11, 2026
May 13, 2026
Holiday Village Scavenger Hunt: A Practical Example to Adapt with Questovery
In a holiday village, a scavenger hunt turns paths, pools and shared spaces into a simple team activity guests can start during their stay without heavy setup.
Why this format works for holiday resorts
A holiday village already has everything needed for a memorable activity: reception, a central square, sports areas, restaurants, walking paths, viewpoints, practical signs and quieter corners. A scavenger hunt gives those places a shared storyline without requiring a stage, staff at every stop or complex logistics.
The format works because it combines site discovery, teamwork and flexible pacing. Guests can play in teams, move from one step to the next, compare progress and notice details they would usually miss. For the activity team, the same structure can support arrival-day onboarding, a launch evening, a family challenge or a corporate group session.
Example route: the secret of the village
Imagine a 60 to 90 minute route for a resort, club or premium campsite. The theme is straightforward: teams must uncover the secret of the village by collecting clues across the property.
- Reception and briefing: participants scan a QR code or open the quest link, choose their team name and read the first instruction in the mobile app.
- The central fountain: a GPS step unlocks when the team reaches the square. The question is based on a visible detail in the surroundings.
- The activity board: players find a hidden code in the weekly program or answer a quiz about the village services.
- The sports court: the team completes a light photo challenge, such as recreating a team pose or framing a specific visual clue.
- The viewpoint path: an observation riddle asks participants to find a viewpoint, a remarkable tree or a local information point.
- The restaurant area: a clue can be delivered through a QR code, a keyword or a question linked to the food and local specialties.
- The quiet zone: a calmer stop introduces cultural, historical or environmental content about the surrounding region.
- Back to the square: the final step validates the last answer, shows progress and can feed a leaderboard when competitive mode is enabled.
The scenario is deliberately simple. The goal is not to trap players, but to give them a reason to explore the site, talk to each other and discover areas they may otherwise overlook.
What Questovery simplifies for organizers
With Questovery, the team prepares the scavenger hunt in a web editor, then participants play through the mobile app. For a holiday village, the useful features are concrete: map-based steps, GPS or QR unlocking, quizzes, codes, photo challenges, media, teams and progress tracking.
Day-of monitoring also matters. The organizer can see which teams are moving forward, spot a blocked group, help at the right moment or close the activity when needed. If the experience is designed as a challenge, the leaderboard provides a clear reference without making the whole activity feel overly competitive.
Practical tips for a first version
- Keep the route short, especially when guests are still discovering the property.
- Design a loop that naturally returns to a central meeting point.
- Mix observation, quiz, code and photo steps to avoid repetition.
- Test the route on a phone before opening it to participants.
- Add a QR fallback for areas where GPS may be less precise.
- Avoid clues in dangerous, private or overly noisy areas.
- Brief the reception team so they can help without giving away every answer.
Once the first route is validated, it becomes easy to create variants: local heritage discovery, evening routes around lit areas, onboarding rallies for groups, parent-supported children’s routes or special activities for internal events.
Turn a one-off activity into a reusable experience
A good scavenger hunt does not replace the activity team. It gives them a structured, reusable and measurable support. Guests explore the place, teams keep a flexible rhythm, and the organizer can improve the route from one session to the next.
To create your first holiday village scavenger hunt, open a Questovery account: https://www.questovery.com/signup
To shape a scenario for your own site, book a demo: https://zcal.co/simon-boisset/questovery