Shell Game (Cups) — Easy Indoor Brain Game for Dogs
A classic three-cup “find it” game that builds nosework, impulse control, and calm problem-solving with positive reinforcement. Perfect for rainy days or when you need **low-effort, high-focus** enrichment.
What you need
- 3 cups (paper or silicone) or small ramekins on a non-slip surface.
- Small treats your dog can eat quickly without losing focus.
- Quiet space with minimal distractions to start.
If your dog is brand-new to rewards, refresh positive reinforcement basics and how it fits into operant conditioning in dog training.
How to do it (3 steps)
- Treat under cup. Let your dog see you place the treat under a single cup. Say “Find it!” once and allow them to investigate. Mark and reward when they nose or paw the correct cup—lift the cup to pay.
- Shuffle slowly. Add a second empty cup. Shuffle a tiny amount (slow, clear movement). Call “Find it!” once and wait quietly. Reward correct indications with a lift and treat at the source.
- Add the third cup. Introduce the classic three-cup layout. Keep the shuffle short and fair. Vary which cup hides the treat so your dog learns to use their nose, not guessing.
If your dog struggles, try shaping in dog training—break the game into micro-wins (look → touch → wait while you lift).
Why it helps (mental stimulation with impulse control)
The shell game channels natural foraging into a calm, thoughtful task. Dogs practice sniff-then-solve: orient to scent, target the right cup, and pause while you lift. Short, successful reps also build confidence—great for shy or new puppies.
Keep arousal balanced using structured breaks. If excitement rises, review threshold management or switch to a snuffle mat cool-down.
Level it up
- Harder shuffle: increase the shuffle length slightly after two easy wins in a row.
- Distance cue: cue “Find it!” from one step away, then two; keep success high.
- Lid a jar: progress from cups to a jar with holes so scent escapes—an intro to simple scent discrimination.
Between reps, add a short mat settle for composure; see management & environmental control.
Troubleshooting
My dog just knocks cups everywhere.
Use heavier ramekins on a non-slip mat, shorten the shuffle, and pay for a simple nose target on the correct cup. Reward calm touches before you lift.
My dog guesses and loses interest.
Make the correct cup obvious again (lid slightly ajar), call “Find it!” once, and pay quickly at the source. A few easy jackpots rebuild momentum before you re-introduce a small shuffle.
It’s getting too exciting.
Insert 10–20 seconds on a mat between reps. Keep energy low, then finish with a brief snuffle-mat cool-down. If stress shows up, revisit threshold management and help for worried puppies.
Try these variations next
Two-Cup Starter
Ingredients & steps
- Use 2 cups; leave the correct lid slightly ajar.
- Place a treat under the ajar cup, cue “Find it!” once.
- Reward calm nose target; close the lid gradually over reps.
Room-to-Room Shells
How to play
- Hide the treat under one cup in Room A, then shuffle briefly.
- After 2–3 wins, move the game to Room B and repeat.
- Keep the first shuffle in each new room short for confidence.
Jackpot Reveal
When to use
After a few quick successes, surprise your dog with a larger reward delivered at the correct cup while they wait calmly. This reinforces thoughtful searching over frantic guessing.
Further reading
FAQs
Is the shell game safe for dogs?
Yes, when played calmly. Choose cups that won’t splinter, use a non-slip surface, and pay before frustration builds. If a dog starts slamming or grabbing cups, simplify and reward gentle nose targets while you lift the cup.
Where should I start hiding?
Begin with one obvious cup, then two cups with the correct lid slightly ajar. Keep shuffles slow and short so your dog can win by using their nose rather than guessing.
How many repetitions should I do?
Two or three mini-sessions of 3–5 reps each is plenty. Insert short breaks on a mat to keep arousal down and end while your dog still wants more.
My dog only watches my hands—how do I build sniffing?
Stand still and keep your hands low and quiet after the cue. Breathe, wait, and reinforce the first calm touch to the correct cup. If needed, scent the cup lightly with a crumb to jump-start sniffing, then fade the help.
Christopher Quinn adopted his first dog, Loki, a spirited Border Collie/Jack Russell mix, after exiting Army service in the summer of 2012. That experience sparked a lifelong passion for canine behavior and positive reinforcement training.
He studied Principles of Dog Training & Behavior at Penn Foster and has since worked with hundreds of dogs from all backgrounds. Over the past two years, Christopher has fostered more than 30 rescue dogs, giving each one a chance at a better life.
Today, he continues to write, teach, and share insights on humane dog training, blending hands-on experience with a decade of dedicated study.