Kwik cricket (known as MILO Walla cricket in Australia, and MILO Black Cricket in New Zealand) is a high-speed version of cricket aimed mainly at encouraging children to take part in the main sport.
Many of the rules are adapted from cricket, but Kwik cricket is played with a plastic bat and ball (for obvious safety and physical reasons), and plastic cones to mark the maximum width of a legally bowled ball. The rules can be altered so that virtually any number of children can play in the time available, and the game can be made easier or more difficult by changing the physical dimensions of the pitch (changing the width of the wickets, increasing the distance between the wickets, widening or narrowing the crease, pulling in or pushing out the boundary, etc.).
For example, Continuous Kwik Cricket can be played by two groups of 10 or 12, with each batting for a set period of time, the Lord's Game can be played by two groups of four or five, and Pairs Kwik Cricket works for groups of 8, each playing as a pair and rotating the roles (batsmen; bowler and wicket-keeper; leg side and off side fielders).
Equipment:
In Australia and New Zealand the game is more formal than in the UK, where the rules include a one-handed catch resulting in the dismissal of the entire team, and rather than plastic cones a nearby landmark is used as a theoretical boundary.
Cones are placed next to the batter's left and right leg, (about one metre away) Tennis Balls are placed on these cones. In most cases in Australia, If the bowler bowls a No-Ball, Wide, Dead Ball, etc., the person Batting would hit either of the cones for a "free shot". The fielders cannot move until the batter hits the ball.