Bridal Jeopardy Questions: Categories and Sample Clues

Wedding Jeopardy game board example
Wedding Jeopardy example in Jippis

If you are putting together a bridal shower, bachelorette weekend, rehearsal dinner, or wedding event, bridal Jeopardy questions are a simple way to make the room feel involved!

Below you will find category ideas and sample clues. If you want to turn them into a board quickly, you can do that using our Jippis creator to both create and run Jeopardy for your bridal party.

The Early Years

Use this category for childhood, family stories, and the version of each person that existed long before the relationship started.

  • The bride was known for this as a kid.
  • The groom was always competitive about this growing up.
  • Her family still brings up this childhood story.
  • He had a very clear favorite hobby as a kid.
  • She spent a lot of her younger years doing this.
  • One small thing from his childhood still fits him perfectly now.

How They Met

This can be one of the easiest bridal Jeopardy categories to make fun, because almost everyone wants to hear the origin story one more time.

  • Their first conversation started because of this.
  • A friend helped bring them together in this way.
  • Their first message was about this.
  • They almost missed each other because of this.
  • Their first hangout turned into something more because of this.
  • The funniest part of how they met was this small detail.

The Couple's Favorites

This category can work well when the clues point to shared habits, favorite places, and small routines that people close to them have seen again and again.

  • This is their go-to takeout order.
  • This is their favorite kind of date night.
  • This snack or dessert is always a safe choice for them.
  • This is the kind of trip they both enjoy most.
  • This show or movie feels very them.
  • This is what they usually choose for a small celebration.

Who Said It?

These clues can sound like recognizable one-liners from the couple, so guests get to figure out who is more likely to have said each one.

  • A line about being late.
  • A line about snacks, dessert, or ordering more food.
  • A line about having a plan.
  • A line about music, movies, or what to watch.
  • A line someone says when they are clearly being stubborn.
  • A line that always sounds exactly like one of them.

Traditions

Use this for yearly rituals, family expectations, holiday patterns, and recurring moments that matter to the couple.

  • This holiday is a big deal for one side of the family.
  • They always do this during a certain season.
  • This family tradition matters a lot to them.
  • This outing or plan has become a yearly ritual.
  • Before a big trip, they always do this.
  • This food, event, or routine feels like a tradition now.

Before They Were Us

This category can focus on who each person was on their own, before they became known as a couple.

  • Before they met, she was already known for this.
  • Before the relationship, he spent a lot of time on this hobby.
  • Her single-life era could be described by this habit or routine.
  • His place was known for this before they moved in together.
  • She was the friend most likely to do this.
  • He had a clear reputation for this before the relationship.

This or That (Who is more likely to)

This category can feel playful and quick. Each clue points to the person more likely to do something, say something, or cause a small household pattern.

  • Who is more likely to pack early?
  • Who is more likely to steal a bite of the other person's food?
  • Who is more likely to start a project at the wrong time?
  • Who is more likely to lose track of their phone or keys?
  • Who is more likely to turn one stop into five?
  • Who is more likely to remember the exact details?

Random Facts

Good bridal Jeopardy questions need a few wildcard clues too. This is where you put the odd details people love once they hear them.

  • They somehow have a lot of this at home.
  • They have a strangely specific rule about this.
  • One of them can never resist this.
  • Their friends still laugh about this small moment from a trip or event.
  • They keep having the same silly debate about this.
  • One of them is surprisingly good at this random thing.

The Early Days

This can stay separate from childhood and focus on first dates, first impressions, and those first few months when the relationship was still taking shape.

  • Their first date stood out because of this.
  • One of them started to take the relationship seriously after this moment.
  • Their first inside joke came from this.
  • One of their earliest photos together came from this kind of plan.
  • This detail made a strong first impression.
  • When they first met each other's friends, this was the memorable part.

Big Moments

This category can be used for milestones after the relationship became established: moves, trips, decisions, celebrations, and turning points.

  • Their first big trip together is remembered for this.
  • This milestone made the relationship feel more serious.
  • This decision changed their everyday routine the most.
  • Friends knew it was serious once they planned this together.
  • One celebration stands out because of this unexpected part.
  • This was the moment it felt like a new chapter.

The Proposal

Proposal clues work best when they focus on setting, planning, misdirection, and the details people close to the couple already know.

  • The surprise almost got spoiled because of this.
  • The proposal happened in a place that mattered because of this.
  • Someone had to help keep this secret.
  • This part of the setting made the proposal feel special.
  • One small thing went off-plan, and now it is part of the story.
  • The first person they called after the proposal was this person.

The Couple

Use this category for the relationship as it exists now: routines, balance, habits, shared jokes, and the way they operate as a team.

  • This is one of their everyday routines as a couple.
  • They work especially well together when this happens.
  • People notice this pattern when they spend time with them.
  • Their dynamic makes sense once you know who usually handles this.
  • Their ideal weekend usually includes this.
  • This tiny disagreement comes up all the time.

Love Languages

This section can stay grounded in real behavior. Think less theory and more the ways they naturally show care to each other.

  • One of them often shows love by doing this practical thing.
  • When they want to reconnect, they usually do this together.
  • A stressful week is often improved by this thoughtful gesture.
  • One of them is especially good at showing care in this way.
  • Making time for this is one of their clearest signs of love.
  • Their version of romance usually looks like this everyday action.

The funniest boards usually mix clues everyone can answer with clues that make one table shout, "Wait, I know this one." That balance is what keeps the game moving without making it feel flat.

Keep the board personal

If you only use obvious facts, the game feels polite but forgettable. If every clue is too niche, half the room checks out. The sweet spot is a board where some answers are easy, some reward knowing the couple well, and a few reveal details people are happy to learn.

That is usually enough to make bridal Jeopardy questions feel less like filler and more like part of the celebration itself.