The bridal shower I still think about was a backyard afternoon with twelve women, two bottles of rose, and three games that had everyone in tears — the good kind. Nobody was forced to wear a toilet paper veil. Nobody had to guess what the bride’s answers would be while she stared at the ceiling praying for it to end.
The games worked because they were actually fun. Not “bridal shower fun” — just fun.

That’s the bar this list is trying to clear. Here are 35 bridal shower games across every vibe — rowdy, relaxed, creative, competitive, printable, and completely prep-free. Whether you’re planning for eight close friends or forty mixed-age guests, there’s a lineup here for it.
Quick-Reference Game Selector
Use this table to find the right game for your group before you read the full descriptions.
| Game | Best for | Group size | Vibe | Prep needed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| How Well Do You Know the Bride? | All groups | Any | Relaxed | Low |
| He Said She Said | Close friends | Any | Hilarious | Low |
| Bridal Bingo | Mixed ages | 10+ | Relaxed | Medium |
| Wedding Word Scramble | All groups | Any | Low-key | Low |
| Dress the Bride | Any | 4–20 | Rowdy | Low |
| Prosecco Pong | Adults only | 6–20 | Rowdy | Low |
| Ring Hunt | All groups | Any | Active | Medium |
| Advice Card Round | All groups | Any | Heartfelt | Low |
| Bridal Pictionary | Any | 6–20 | Hilarious | Low |
| Shoe Game (shower version) | Close friends | Any | Warm | None |
Game Duration Guide
| Game type | Average duration | Good for |
|---|---|---|
| Trivia / quiz games | 15–20 minutes | Opening activity |
| Card / printable games | 10–15 minutes | Quiet warm-up |
| Active / physical games | 10–20 minutes | Mid-party energy boost |
| Creative / craft games | 30–45 minutes | Main activity |
| Heartfelt / reflection games | 10–15 minutes | Wind-down before gifts |
| Team games | 20–30 minutes | Large group engagement |
Know the Couple — Bridal Shower Games
These games centre on the bride, the groom, and the relationship — the ones that make the whole party feel like a celebration of this specific couple rather than a generic party.
1. How Well Do You Know the Bride?
Before the shower, collect ten to fifteen facts about the bride — her first job, her biggest fear, her go-to comfort food, her most embarrassing moment. Print them as a quiz card. Guests fill in their answers, then the bride reveals the correct ones.
The guest with the most right answers wins. This game works for every group size, every age, and every relationship to the bride. It’s the classic for a reason.

Players: Any number Prep time: 20 minutes (quiz card creation) Materials: Printed quiz cards, pens
2. He Said She Said
Before the shower, ask the groom (in secret) a list of questions about the relationship — who said “I love you” first, who is the better cook, who takes longer to get ready.
Read the questions aloud at the shower and ask guests to guess whether it was “he said” or “she said.” Then reveal the groom’s actual answers. The bride’s reactions are usually the best part.

Players: Any number Prep time: 30 minutes (questionnaire to groom in advance) Materials: Printed answer cards or display
3. How Old Was the Bride?
Collect photos of the bride from childhood through to now — the more embarrassing the better — and display them without dates. Guests guess her age in each photo.
The closest guess for each photo wins a point. It’s a lovely way to celebrate the bride’s life and gives everyone something to laugh about together.

Players: Any number Prep time: Medium (photo collection needed) Materials: Printed or displayed photos, score cards
4. The Newlywed Game (Shower Edition)
Send both the bride and the groom a list of questions separately before the shower. Questions like: “What would your partner say is your most annoying habit?” or “Where did you have your first kiss?”
Read the questions aloud at the shower, reveal both answers, and award points for matches. It works because the mismatches are as entertaining as the matches.

Players: Any number (bride participates) Prep time: Medium (questionnaires to both parties) Materials: Printed or displayed question list
5. Two Truths and a Lie — Couple Edition
The bride shares three statements about her relationship — two true, one a lie. Guests vote on which is the lie. Then play another round where guests submit their own two truths and a lie about the couple (things they’ve witnessed or heard). It’s an icebreaker and a relationship trivia game in one.

Players: Any number Prep time: None Materials: None (or small cards for written submissions)
6. Love Story Timeline
Print key moments in the couple’s relationship — first date, first trip together, first fight, engagement — as individual cards, shuffle them, and give a set to each table. Teams race to put the timeline in the correct order. The bride then reveals the real order. Fast, competitive, and requires zero prep beyond printing the cards.

Players: 6+ (works in teams) Prep time: Low (card printing) Materials: Printed timeline cards per team
Icebreaker Bridal Shower Games
These games warm up a room where not everyone knows each other — which is most bridal showers.
7. Bridal Bingo
Give each guest a blank 5×5 bingo grid and ask them to fill in names of other guests. During the shower, call out descriptions — “has known the bride longest,” “travelled furthest to be here,” “is wearing something blue” — and guests mark off the name that fits. First to complete a line wins. It’s a gentle way to get people talking across tables.

Players: 10+ Prep time: Low (blank grids printed) Materials: Printed bingo grids, pens, small prizes
8. Find Your Match
Before the shower, write famous couples on sticky labels — one name per label. Attach a label to each guest’s back as they arrive. Guests can only ask yes/no questions to figure out who they are and find their match. Once matched, the pair interviews each other and introduces the other to the group.

Players: 10–30 (even numbers) Prep time: Low (labels prepared) Materials: Sticky labels, pen
9. Purse Scavenger Hunt
Read out a list of increasingly obscure items — a coin from a different country, a photo of a pet, a lipstick, a receipt from this week, a hair tie, a loyalty card. Guests race to find items in their bags. Points for each item found. First to ten points wins. Chaotic, funny, and requires zero preparation.

Players: Any number Prep time: None Materials: A list of items (read aloud)
10. Guest Bingo Card
Create bingo cards with descriptions rather than names — “has been to more than five weddings,” “is an only child,” “has met the groom’s family,” “cried at a rom-com this year.” Guests mingle to find people matching each description and write their names in the squares. First to fill a row wins.

Players: 12+ Prep time: Medium (custom bingo cards) Materials: Printed bingo cards, pens
11. Name That Tune — Wedding Edition
Play five-second clips of famous wedding songs, love songs, and songs from the bride’s favourite artists. Guests write down their answers. The guest who identifies the most songs correctly wins. It’s fast, requires minimal explanation, and works perfectly while guests are still arriving and settling in.

Players: Any number Prep time: Medium (playlist preparation) Materials: Speaker, song list, answer cards
Hilarious and Rowdy Bridal Shower Games
These are the games that generate the stories guests tell for years afterward.
12. Dress the Bride in Toilet Paper
Divide guests into teams of three or four. Each team gets several rolls of toilet paper and ten minutes to design and dress one team member as a bride — veil, dress, bouquet, and all. The bride judges the results. The designs are always more creative than anyone expects and the photos are chaotic and wonderful.

Players: 9–24 (groups of 3–4) Prep time: None Materials: Multiple rolls of toilet paper per team
13. Prosecco Pong
Set up a beer pong-style table with glasses of prosecco or sparkling water instead of solo cups. Teams take turns trying to land a ping pong ball in the opposing team’s glasses. Anyone whose glass is landed in takes a sip. Adapt the rules to be as competitive or as casual as the group needs.

Players: 4–16 (adults) Prep time: Low (table setup) Materials: Plastic cups or wine glasses, ping pong balls, drinks
14. Pin the Veil on the Bride
A blindfolded spin on pin the tail on the donkey. Create or print a large image of the groom and have guests, one at a time, attempt to blindly pin or tape a paper veil in the right place. The closest wins. The attempts are almost always funnier than the outcome.

Players: Any number Prep time: Medium (image and veils to prepare) Materials: Large printed image, paper veils, blindfold, tape
15. Wedding Word Scramble Race
Give each guest a sheet of scrambled wedding-related words — veil, bouquet, honeymoon, rehearsal, officiant, bridesmaid, and so on — and set a timer for three minutes. Most unscrambled words wins. Simple, fast, and surprisingly competitive once the timer starts.

Players: Any number Prep time: Low (one printed sheet per guest) Materials: Printed scramble sheets, pens, timer
16. Who Am I? — Wedding Version
Each guest gets a sticky note on their forehead with the name of a famous bride, groom, or wedding-related celebrity (think: Princess Diana, Kim Kardashian, Ross Geller). They ask yes/no questions to figure out their identity. Guests who figure it out fastest keep playing; those who can’t after ten questions are out.

Players: 8–25 Prep time: Low (name labels) Materials: Sticky notes, pen
17. Ring Hunt
Before guests arrive, hide small plastic rings (available cheaply in bulk online) around the venue — in flower arrangements, under table settings, in the bathroom, in the garden. The guest who finds the most rings by the end of the party wins a prize. Announce the hunt at the start and let guests look throughout the whole shower.

Players: Any number Prep time: Medium (rings hidden in advance) Materials: Plastic rings in bulk, small prize
Creative and Craft Bridal Shower Games
These games produce something beautiful — which makes them feel less like games and more like shared experiences.
18. Decorate a Wedding Hanger
Buy plain wooden or wire hangers — one per guest — and set up a craft station with paint, markers, ribbon, and small decorations. Guests personalise a hanger for the bride. At the end of the shower, the bride has a collection of unique, handmade hangers from everyone she loves. Better than any store-bought gift.

Players: Any number Prep time: Medium (craft supplies sourced) Materials: Plain hangers, paint, markers, ribbon, gems
19. Design the Wedding Cake
Give each table a piece of paper with a blank three-tier cake outline. Each person at the table contributes one element of the design — flavour, icing, decorations, topper — and the table presents their final concept to the group. The bride picks her favourite. Surprisingly heated and always funny.

Players: 6–30 (teams of 3–5) Prep time: Low (printed cake outlines) Materials: Printed cake templates, markers
20. Write a Recipe for a Happy Marriage
Give each guest a recipe card and ask them to write out their “recipe for a happy marriage” — listing the ingredients and method as if writing a real recipe. Collect all the cards and read them aloud. Some will be heartfelt, some will be hilarious, and the bride keeps all of them as a keepsake.

Players: Any number Prep time: Low (recipe cards printed) Materials: Printed recipe cards, pens
21. Flower Crown Workshop
Set up a flower crown station with wire headbands, floral wire, ribbon, and artificial or fresh flowers. Walk guests through making a simple flower crown. Everyone wears theirs for the rest of the shower. It turns the whole party into a photo opportunity and gives guests something beautiful to take home.

Players: Any number Prep time: High (supplies sourced and station set up) Materials: Wire headbands, flowers, floral wire, ribbon
22. Decorate a Pillowcase
Plain white pillowcases, fabric markers, and a prompt: decorate a pillowcase for the bride’s first night as a married woman. Guests draw, write messages, inside jokes, or well-wishes. The bride takes home a set of completely personalised pillowcases that she’ll keep long after the wedding.

Players: Any number (one pillowcase per guest or shared set) Prep time: Low (supplies gathered) Materials: White pillowcases, fabric markers
23. Guess That Dress
Before the shower, collect images of famous wedding dresses — royal weddings, celebrity weddings, movie weddings, and a few unknowns — and display them without names. Guests guess whose dress each one is. The bride reveals the answers. It sparks conversations about wedding style and is surprisingly competitive.

Players: Any number Prep time: Medium (image collection and display) Materials: Printed or displayed images, answer cards
Relaxed and Low-Key Bridal Shower Games
Not every group wants to compete. These games are gentler — more about connection than winning.
24. Advice Card Round
Give every guest a card with two prompts: one piece of marriage advice and one memory or wish for the couple. Collect all the cards, shuffle them, and read them aloud without names. The group guesses who wrote each one. It’s warm, funny, and the cards become a keepsake the bride genuinely treasures.

Players: Any number Prep time: Low (cards printed) Materials: Printed cards, pens
25. The Shoe Game (Shower Version)
The bride sits in a chair with one of her shoes and one of the groom’s shoes. Questions are read aloud — “Who is the better listener?” “Who will do most of the cooking?” — and the bride raises the shoe of whoever she thinks fits the answer. Guests observe and discuss. No scoring, no winning — just laughter and insight.

Players: Any number (bride participates) Prep time: None (bring one of groom’s shoes) Materials: One bride’s shoe, one groom’s shoe
26. Memory Lane Storytelling
Go around the room and ask each guest to share their favourite memory with the bride — the funnier or more obscure the better. No structure, no scoring, just storytelling. Works best for groups where most people know the bride well. Guests who don’t know her well learn more about her in fifteen minutes than they would in an hour of formal games.

Players: Up to 20 Prep time: None Materials: None
27. Bucket List for the Couple
Give each guest a card and ask them to write five things they think the couple should do together in their first year of marriage — adventures, meals, experiences, traditions to start. Collect and bind them into a small booklet for the couple. A genuinely useful and personal gift that costs nothing to make.

Players: Any number Prep time: Low (cards and binding) Materials: Cards, pens, ribbon or binding
28. Something Old, New, Borrowed, Blue Trivia
Create a trivia game around the “something old, new, borrowed, blue” tradition — where it comes from, famous examples from celebrity weddings, unusual interpretations. Mix in other wedding tradition trivia. Works well for a mixed-age group because older guests often know the history and younger guests often know the celebrity examples.

Players: Any number Prep time: Medium (trivia prepared) Materials: Printed trivia cards or displayed questions
29. Wishes for the Bride Jar
Place a large jar on a table near the entrance with a stack of small cards and pens. Ask guests to write a wish for the bride on a card and drop it in throughout the shower. At the end, the bride reads them aloud. No game mechanics, no winner — just a quiet, warm tradition that produces something the bride keeps forever.

Players: Any number Prep time: Very low (jar, cards, pens) Materials: Glass jar, small cards, pens
Printable and Prep-Free Bridal Shower Games
These are the games you can pull together the night before — or the morning of — without breaking a sweat.
30. Wedding Crossword
Create a wedding-themed crossword with clues about the couple, wedding traditions, and love-related words. Print one per guest. Give guests ten minutes to complete as much as they can, then go through the answers together. Available as free templates online — just customise the clues to reference the couple.

Players: Any number Prep time: Low (free templates available online) Materials: Printed crosswords, pens
31. What’s in Your Phone?
Read out a list of things guests might have on their phones — a photo taken within the last 24 hours, a text from their mum, a food delivery app, a song by the bride’s favourite artist, an embarrassing selfie. Guests get a point for each one they find. First to ten points wins. Requires literally no preparation.

Players: Any number Prep time: None Materials: None (just a list read aloud)
32. Bridal Mad Libs
Create a Mad Libs-style story about the couple’s wedding day with blanks for adjectives, nouns, verbs, and names. Guests fill in the blanks without seeing the story first. Read the completed story aloud. The results are reliably absurd and reliably funny.

Players: Any number Prep time: Low (one page printed per guest) Materials: Printed Mad Libs sheets, pens
33. Wedding Pictionary
Write wedding-related words and phrases on slips of paper — “first dance,” “cold feet,” “something borrowed,” “the mother-in-law,” “a destination wedding” — fold and place in a bowl. Teams take turns drawing while their team guesses. First team to a set number of points wins. All you need is paper, a marker, and an easel or whiteboard.

Players: 6–20 Prep time: None (word slips take five minutes) Materials: Paper slips, bowl, large paper or whiteboard, markers
34. Would She Rather?
Before the shower, compile a list of “would the bride rather” questions — “Would she rather have a beach wedding or a mountain wedding?” “Would she rather forget her vows or lose the rings?” Read them aloud and guests vote by raising hands. Then the bride reveals her actual answer. Points for correct guesses. Simple, fast, no printing required.

Players: Any number Prep time: None (questions read aloud) Materials: None
35. Love at First Sight — Photo Match
Print photos of the bride and groom as babies, children, and teenagers — separately, without labels — and ask guests to match each photo to the right person. Then reveal the answers. The game works in about ten minutes, requires no explanation, and always produces genuine surprise and laughter.

Players: Any number Prep time: Medium (photos collected and printed) Materials: Printed photos, answer sheets, pens
Prize Ideas by Game Category
| Game category | Prize suggestions | Budget range |
|---|---|---|
| Trivia / quiz games | Candle, bath salts, wine, gift card | $5–$20 |
| Active / physical games | Chocolate box, skincare set, book | $8–$25 |
| Creative / craft games | Art supplies, plant, personalised mug | $10–$20 |
| Printable games | Notebook, lip balm set, small succulent | $3–$15 |
| Icebreaker games | Nail polish set, tea collection, journal | $5–$15 |
| Heartfelt / relaxed games | No prize needed — participation is the reward | — |
Prep Time and Materials at a Glance
| Game | Prep time | Key materials needed |
|---|---|---|
| How Well Do You Know the Bride? | 20 min | Printed quiz cards, pens |
| He Said She Said | 30 min | Groom’s answers in advance |
| Bridal Bingo | 15 min | Printed bingo grids, pens |
| Dress the Bride | 0 min | Toilet paper rolls |
| Prosecco Pong | 10 min | Cups, ping pong balls, drinks |
| Ring Hunt | 30 min | Plastic rings in bulk |
| Decorate a Hanger | 30 min | Hangers, markers, ribbon |
| Flower Crown Workshop | 45 min | Wire, flowers, floral tape |
| What’s in Your Phone? | 0 min | Nothing — just a list |
| Wedding Pictionary | 5 min | Paper slips, whiteboard |
Which Games Work for All Ages
| Game | Works for mixed ages? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bridal Bingo | ✓ Yes | Gentle, no pressure |
| Advice Card Round | ✓ Yes | Everyone has wisdom to share |
| Purse Scavenger Hunt | ✓ Yes | Funny for all generations |
| Wishes for the Bride Jar | ✓ Yes | Quiet and optional |
| How Well Do You Know the Bride? | ✓ Yes | Different guests know different things |
| Prosecco Pong | ✗ Adults only | Keep it to the younger crowd |
| Dress the Bride | ✓ Most ages | Skip if mobility is a concern |
| Wedding Pictionary | ✓ Yes | Visual and accessible |
| Memory Lane Storytelling | ✓ Yes | Best when guests know the bride |
| Name That Tune | ✓ Yes | Mix older and newer songs for fairness |
Suggested Bridal Shower Game Schedule
| Time | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Guests arriving | Name That Tune playing quietly | Ongoing |
| 30 min in | Icebreaker game (Bridal Bingo or Find Your Match) | 15 min |
| 1 hour in | Main trivia game (How Well Do You Know the Bride?) | 20 min |
| 1.5 hours in | Active or creative game (Dress the Bride or Hanger Decorating) | 20–30 min |
| 2 hours in | Relaxed game during lunch or nibbles (Advice Cards) | 15 min |
| Before gifts | Heartfelt round (Wishes Jar or Shoe Game) | 10 min |
| During gifts | Wedding Crossword or Word Scramble at tables | Ongoing |
Indoor vs Outdoor Game Guide
| Game | Indoor | Outdoor | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bridal Bingo | ✓ | ✓ | Works anywhere |
| Ring Hunt | ✓ | ✓ | More fun outdoors with space |
| Prosecco Pong | ✓ | ✓ | Easier to set up outdoors |
| Dress the Bride | ✓ | ✓ | More space outdoors is better |
| Flower Crown Workshop | ✓ | ✓ | Wind can be tricky outdoors |
| Purse Scavenger Hunt | ✓ | ✓ | Works anywhere guests are seated |
| Memory Lane Storytelling | ✓ | ✓ | Needs guests to be able to hear each other |
| Pin the Veil on the Bride | ✓ | ✓ | Needs wall or board indoors |
| Name That Tune | ✓ | Limited | Speaker quality varies outdoors |
| Photo Booth Games | ✓ | ✓ | Natural light is better outdoors |
A note on how many games to actually play
Two to three games is the right number for a two-hour bridal shower. Three to four for three hours. More than that and it starts to feel like you’re filling time rather than celebrating someone.
The temptation when planning is to over-programme — to pack the schedule so there are no gaps. Resist it. The best moments at a bridal shower are almost always the unscripted ones: the story someone tells between games, the toast nobody planned, the moment where everyone ends up talking about the first time they knew the bride was in love.
Games are the structure. Leave room for the magic to happen in between them.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many games should you play at a bridal shower?
Two to three games is the ideal number for a standard two-hour bridal shower. For a three-hour event, three to four games works well. More than four games in an afternoon tends to feel exhausting — guests come to celebrate the bride, not to compete in a games marathon. A good structure is one icebreaker game early on to warm up the room, one main trivia or activity game in the middle, and one relaxed or heartfelt game toward the end. Leave unscheduled time between games for conversation, food, and the moments that can’t be planned.
What are the most popular bridal shower games?
The most consistently popular bridal shower games are How Well Do You Know the Bride? (a quiz-style trivia game that works for any group size), He Said She Said (where guests guess which partner said what), Bridal Bingo (a gentle icebreaker that works for mixed-age groups), Dress the Bride in Toilet Paper (reliably chaotic and funny), and the Advice Card Round (where guests write and share marriage advice). These five games appear most frequently because they require minimal prep, work for large and small groups, and generate genuine laughter and connection rather than awkward silence.
What bridal shower games work for all ages?
The best bridal shower games for mixed-age groups are those with no physical requirements and no niche cultural references. Bridal Bingo, the Purse Scavenger Hunt, the Advice Card Round, Wishes for the Bride Jar, and How Well Do You Know the Bride? all work across generations because they either require no prior knowledge or draw on things everyone has (a handbag, a phone, opinions on marriage). Avoid games that rely heavily on current pop culture, require physical mobility, or involve alcohol consumption — these exclude older or more reserved guests. When in doubt, choose a game where participation can be as low-key or enthusiastic as each guest chooses.
Do you need prizes for bridal shower games?
Prizes make games more competitive and energetic, but they’re not essential — especially for smaller or more intimate showers. Heartfelt games like the Advice Card Round or Wishes Jar need no prize because the experience is the reward. For trivia, physical, and team games, a small prize (a candle, a small plant, a gift card, a box of chocolates) adds stakes and makes winning feel meaningful. Keep prizes modest — $5–$15 is plenty. The goal is acknowledgement, not a significant gift. If budget is tight, skip prizes entirely and offer something non-material instead: the winner chooses the next song, picks their seat for the gift-opening, or gets first choice of the desserts.
Which games are making your shortlist? Drop a comment — I’d love to know what you’re planning.





