Who Knows the Couple Best Questions for Wedding Quizzes
This format works best when the guests are not just watching the couple, but actively guessing and earning points themselves.
Why this format often works better than passive watching
In a who-knows-the-couple-best game, the couple is not the only one answering. The guests are trying to guess too, which creates more participation, more comparison, and usually more energy.
If you want the classic version, stay with the shoe game questions. If guests should be competing for points, this format is usually stronger.
Easy warm-up questions
- Who made the first move?
- Who said "I love you" first?
- Who was more nervous on the first date?
- Who is more punctual?
- Who is more organized?
- Who is the better cook?
- Who is the better driver?
- Who talks more?
Questions about the couple's story
- Who suggested the first date?
- Who met the other person's parents first?
- Who talked about marriage first?
- Who initiated the proposal moment?
- Who remembers the exact date they met better?
- Who realized first that this was serious?
- Who was ready to move in together first?
- Who started using the word "we" first?
Habits and daily-life prompts
- Who takes longer to get ready?
- Who checks their phone more often?
- Who is more likely to forget something important?
- Who over-orders food more often?
- Who is more impulsive?
- Who saves more money?
- Who tidies up first?
- Who has the bigger influence over the music at home?
Questions that look ahead
- Who will be the stricter parent later on?
- Who will plan the vacations?
- Who will make the more embarrassing parent jokes?
- Who will hit the dance floor first at future parties?
- Who will change the route more often on the honeymoon?
- Who is more likely to book a spontaneous weekend away?
- Who will organize the family during holidays?
- Who will keep a closer eye on the budget?
How to keep the quiz competitive without making it messy
- Use 10 to 15 questions when the quiz is only one short reception slot.
- Mix obvious answers with a few harder ones so the leaderboard stays interesting.
- Tell guests whether the format rewards only accuracy or also speed.
- If you want the room engaged, this format works especially well when guests submit phone-based predictions before the live reveal.
This format is a strong fit for the interactive version
If guests should score points and see their pre-submitted predictions compared live on screen, the demo is the fastest way to understand the format in practice.
Continue in the quiz cluster
These pages help with the broader quiz format, the classic shoe game path, and the interactive implementation.
More wedding quiz questions built for guests
Use the broader quiz page when you want to build a larger audience-led game.
Stay with the classic shoe game instead
The pillar page is better when only the couple is answering and the room is mostly watching.
See the interactive version of this format
The demo shows how a who-knows-the-couple-best quiz works when guest predictions are collected before the live reveal.