Wedding Shoe Game MC Script
A simple script for opening, explaining, and closing the shoe game so the host sounds confident and relaxed.
What this script is for
This script is intentionally short. A strong host does not need ten paragraphs, just a clear opening, a few smooth transitions, and a clean finish.
If you still need the overall structure first, read the wedding shoe game rules.
Sample opening lines
Alright, now we are going to test how well this couple really knows each other. For the shoe game, the two of them sit back-to-back, each holding one of their own shoes and one of their partner's shoes. I will read a question, and they will raise the shoe of the person the answer fits.
Short transitions during the round
- We will warm up with a couple of easy ones first.
- Alright, now we can get a little more personal.
- That was too easy. Let us see who is actually honest up here.
- Two more strong ones, then we will let you get back to the party.
What the MC should pay attention to
- Read each prompt clearly and slowly, but do not over-explain it.
- Leave a short beat after each answer so the room can react.
- Do not comment on every single question or the pacing will die.
- When in doubt, keep it shorter and finish cleanly.
Sample closing lines
And that is the end of our shoe game. Give the couple another big round of applause. If you were playing along, you now know either how well you know them or that you urgently need another drink.
Now you only need the right prompts
Pair the script with either the funny list or the clean list. If you want the room participating too, jump into the demo after that and see how guests submit predictions before the live round.
Helpful next pages
Move from the script straight into rules, prompt selection, and timing.
The rules and flow for the full round
Pair the script with a clear structure so the hosting actually lands.
Funny prompts for the actual game
Once the script is ready, you only need the right question bank.
Find the right slot in the reception timeline
Even a great script underperforms if the timing is wrong.