The Best Newlywed Game Questions for Any Couple
The Newlywed Game has been making couples squirm, laugh, and occasionally sleep on the couch since 1966. The premise is brilliantly simple: answer questions about your partner without peeking at their answers, then compare. The more you match, the better you "know" each other.
But here's the thing — you don't need to be newlyweds to play. You don't even need to be married. These questions work for couples at any stage, from three months in to three decades in. In fact, some couples who've been together for years are the most surprised by what they don't know.
This is the most complete list of newlywed game questions you'll find — organized by category, calibrated for different comfort levels, and actually worth asking.
How the Newlywed Game Actually Works
The classic format: one partner leaves the room (or can't see the screen), the other answers a set of questions. Then both sets of answers are revealed and compared. You score a point for every match.
Modern versions are even better. Tools like blindside.to let both partners answer simultaneously — blindly — before revealing everything at once. No one answers first. No one is influenced. It's the purest version of the game, and the reveal moment hits differently when neither of you could hedge your bets.
The goal isn't just to win. It's the conversation that happens after the mismatches. That's where the real value is.
The Best Newlywed Game Questions: All Categories
Classic "Who Is More Likely To…" Questions
These are crowd favorites because they're low-stakes and high-laugh. Both partners answer about themselves — or about each other, depending on how you frame it.
- Who is more likely to get lost with GPS?
- Who is more likely to cry at a commercial?
- Who takes longer to get ready?
- Who is more likely to start an argument over something tiny?
- Who would survive longer in the wilderness?
- Who is more likely to stay up until 3am falling down a YouTube rabbit hole?
- Who is the better driver? (Careful with this one.)
- Who is more likely to apologize first?
- Who spends more money on impulse buys?
- Who is more likely to remember an anniversary?
Newlywed Game Questions About the Relationship
This is where things get interesting. These questions test how aligned you are on your shared story.
- Where was our first date?
- Who said "I love you" first?
- What was I wearing when we met?
- What's the first meal we ever cooked together?
- What song do you most associate with us?
- What's the most romantic thing I've ever done for you?
- What's the worst fight we've ever had?
- What's something we've talked about doing together but haven't yet?
- What's a trip we took that you'd want to relive?
- What do you think was the turning point in our relationship?
Getting-to-Know-You Questions (That Go Deeper)
Even couples who've been together for years can blank on these. They sound easy. They're not.
- What is my biggest insecurity?
- What do I worry about most?
- Who is my closest friend outside of our relationship?
- What's something I've never told my parents?
- What's the compliment I most need to hear?
- What's a childhood memory I bring up most often?
- What's one thing I'd change about my past if I could?
- What do I consider my greatest achievement so far?
- What's a skill I secretly wish I had?
- What's something I judge other people for, even though I probably shouldn't?
That last one always generates a conversation.
Newlywed Game Questions About Preferences and Habits
Light, fun, and surprisingly revealing about how much you actually pay attention to each other day-to-day.
- What's my go-to comfort food?
- What's a TV show I could rewatch forever?
- What's my drink order at a coffee shop?
- What's the first thing I do when I wake up?
- What's my least favorite household chore?
- What kind of music do I put on when I'm in a good mood?
- What's my most-used app on my phone?
- What's something I buy every single time I go to the grocery store?
- What's a movie I quote too often?
- What's my preferred way to spend a Sunday morning?
Future and Values Questions
These matter more than people realize. Couples who can answer these for each other are genuinely aligned — not just coexisting.
- Where do I see us living in ten years?
- What's one thing I want to accomplish in the next five years?
- What does my ideal retirement look like?
- How do I feel about having kids (or having more kids)?
- What's a cause or issue I care deeply about?
- What would I do if money wasn't a factor?
- What does "enough" look like for me — financially, professionally, personally?
- What kind of parent do I want to be (or am I)?
- What's something I want us to do before we're 60?
- What do I think the secret to a long, happy relationship is?
Play the Newlywed Game Right Now — No App Needed
blindside lets both of you answer simultaneously, in secret, then reveals everything at once. It's free, instant, and way more revealing than you'd expect.
Play Free on blindsideSpicy Newlywed Game Questions (For the Right Crowd)
If you're playing at a bridal shower or with future in-laws, maybe skip this section. If it's just the two of you on a Friday night, carry on.
- Where is the strangest place we've been intimate?
- What's something I've always wanted to try but haven't asked for?
- What's the most attractive thing about me — that isn't my looks?
- What's something I do that drives you crazy �� in a good way?
- What's a fantasy I've mentioned that you actually remember?
- What's the longest we've gone without being intimate since we got together?
- What did you think about me the first time you saw me?
- What's something you've wanted to say to me that you haven't yet?
These don't have to be raunchy to land. Vulnerability is the spice here.
Tips for Playing Newlywed Game Questions Well
Don't keep score like it's a competition
It's tempting to treat mismatches as failures. Resist that. A mismatch is just a conversation starter. "Interesting — why did you answer that?" is worth more than any point.
Mix easy questions with harder ones
Start with preferences and habits to warm up. Save the values and future questions for when you're already laughing and loose. The emotional depth hits better when you've been having fun.
Play regularly, not just once
A lot of couples do this for a wedding shower and never again. That's like going to the gym once and expecting results. Regular check-ins — even monthly — using questions specifically designed to catch small issues early — are one of the highest-ROI things you can do for a relationship.
Let the reveals breathe
Don't rush past a surprising answer. Sit with it. Ask about it. The best version of this game is slow and curious, not rapid-fire trivia.
Why These Questions Actually Strengthen a Relationship
It's not magic. It's just attention.
When you answer questions about your partner, you're doing something most couples forget to do: actively paying attention to who they are right now, not who they were when you met. People change. Preferences shift. What someone worried about at 25 is different from what keeps them up at 35.
Research on relationship satisfaction consistently points to something called "perceived partner responsiveness" — basically, feeling known and understood by your partner. Newlywed game questions, done right, are a direct exercise in that. You're not just playing a game. You're updating your mental model of each other.
If you're looking for other ways to build that kind of connection, activities that actually strengthen your bond tend to share the same DNA: they require presence, a bit of vulnerability, and genuine curiosity about each other.
Using blindside for Newlywed Game Questions
One of the best things about blindside is that it removes the temptation to adjust your answer based on what your partner just said. Both of you answer simultaneously. Neither of you knows what the other wrote until the reveal.
That's actually closer to the spirit of the original game — and it means the mismatches are real. No hedging. No "well, I said that because I thought you'd say…" Just honest answers and the conversations they spark.
It's free, requires no app download, and takes about three minutes to start a round. You can also build your own questions, which means you can pull directly from any list on this page.
Pair it with a glass of wine and a home date night and you've got a genuinely memorable evening for basically zero cost.
Your Next Date Night Is Already Planned
Pick a category from above, open blindside, and see how well you really know each other. The best relationships aren't built on assumptions — they're built on curiosity.
Play Free on blindsideFrequently Asked Questions
What are the best newlywed game questions for a bridal shower?
Stick to the "who is more likely to…" category and relationship origin questions — they're funny, low-stakes, and crowd-pleasing. Questions like "who said I love you first?" and "who takes longer to get ready?" work well for mixed audiences. Save the deeper or spicier questions for when it's just the two of you.
How many questions should you use in a newlywed game?
Ten to fifteen questions is the sweet spot for most sessions. Fewer than ten and it's over before it gets interesting. More than twenty and it starts to feel like homework. If you're playing as a couple rather than at an event, ten questions with good conversation in between is worth more than thirty rushed ones.
Can you play newlywed game questions if you're not married?
Absolutely. The "newlywed" label is just branding. These questions work for dating couples, long-term partners, and newly engaged pairs just as well — sometimes better, because there's less assumption that you already know everything about each other.
What makes a good newlywed game question?
The best questions have a clear answer (so you can compare), reveal something genuine about a person's personality or preferences, and create a moment worth talking about when the answers don't match. Avoid questions so vague that any answer fits, or so specific that only one answer is "right."