Top 5 ideas for town hall events
How to liven up your community


Birthday parties, brocantes, ducasses: communes are always trying to put on events that will enable residents to have a good time. Hiring out entertainment is certainly a good way of ensuring that everyone has a good time.
But which ones are most likely to please?

Town halls: activities to set up

In order to retrace the history of the town, a treasure hunt to find clues and go back in time by visiting certain emblematic places in the town can be a real success. It requires a great deal of upstream organizational work, and children will undoubtedly feel a little left out, especially if the riddles are a little complicated or related to the history of the place.

These same children will be delighted to find a carousel in the square. But then it's the adults who will feel short-changed, as they'll have to be content with waving their hands every time their child passes in front of them.

The same goes for the inflatables, where children up to a certain age can have fun. Again, nothing for teenagers and adults.

Organizing a flea market is a good idea, all the more so as, with the price of tickets, it allows you to make the event profitable and therefore to ask an ice-cream vendor or a mobile French fry shop to set up so that participants can eat. The weather has to be just right, which is never a certainty, even on sunny days. And does everyone enjoy buying second-hand?

What is connected go-kart?

So much so, in fact, that although it was initially confined to private individuals, it has now found its way (or rather, a royal road) into the corporate arena, where it is a popular choice for professional events such as seminars.

There's no seasonality to connected karting, because the vehicles are powered by an electric battery. So they're not like conventional go-karts, which can be blamed for emitting gases that are not only harmful to health, but also to the planet.
Thanks to their electric operation, the karts can be set up outside or in a large festival hall. The vehicles are supplied with spare batteries for a full day of fun and laughter, with no technical interruptions.

In addition to the battery that drives it, each kart includes a laser. The driver's mission is twofold: to drive around the circuit made up of safe inflatable modules featuring curves, and to reach the finish line with the highest number of points.

Points are earned by firing a laser at other drivers. Each kart hit immediately loses speed, and worse, the driver loses points.
To get back into the race, in every sense of the word, he has to find his own targets who won't let him down.


Between those who drive in zigzags, those who spin their karts at 360°, and those who wait at the finish line for drivers to arrive to aim and cross it first: there's clearly a strategy to be found to get the best out of the game.
Men, women and children alike will love this animation, especially as the smaller karts, available from age 9, can be limited in terms of speed.
Having to perform several actions at the same time is great fun, and there's no guarantee of victory right up to the last second, so there's plenty of suspense throughout the game

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