Hand-picked Family Feud questions designed for one thing: making your players laugh out loud. Tested at real game nights.
The funniest Family Feud questions aren't the ones with the wildest answers — they're the ones where everyone in the room has a slightly embarrassing, very honest answer they don't want to say out loud. The comedy comes from the awkward pause, the eye contact, and the eventual confession.
This list is curated for laugh-out-loud reactions. Every question was tested with real game-night audiences and made the cut because it consistently got the room laughing.
Speed kills comedy — give players a beat to react. Encourage teams to confer out loud (the funniest moments happen during the debate). And don't skip the "show all answers" reveal at the end of each round — that's where the biggest laughs land.
Want a board with sound effects and a dramatic point reveal? Spin up a free game in our builder. The audio cues alone are worth it.
1. Name something you do when you're home alone
2. Name something you've done while on mute on a video call
3. Name something you've cried during
4. Name something you do in the shower besides clean
5. Name something everyone has Googled but won't admit
1. Name an awkward thing that happens at a wedding
2. Name something embarrassing that happens in public
3. Name something you can't unsee
4. Name a moment that ruins a first date
5. Name something embarrassing that happens during a job interview
1. Name something people lie about on Instagram
2. Name a lie kids tell parents
3. Name a lie at the doctor
4. Name a lie people tell themselves on Sunday night
1. Name something you'd find weird in a hotel room
2. Name a weird gift to give a coworker
3. Name something a ghost would say
4. Name a job that sounds fun but isn't
5. Name something you'd hate to do in front of your boss
Universally awkward truths. The funniest questions ask about something everyone does but nobody admits — pretending to like a coworker's pet, lying on Instagram, what you do alone in your car.
Read slowly, pause after each question, and let the awkward silence build. Don't rush to fill the gap — that's where the funniest answers come from.
Most of them are, but the 'Things People Won't Admit' category leans PG-13. For pure kid-safe humor, see our questions for kids page.
Yes — comedy writers steal Family Feud-style question structure all the time. Just credit the format, not us specifically (we're not the originators).
'Things People Lie About' is gold for office events — universally relatable without crossing any HR lines.
Cap at 5 minutes per question. The comedy peaks early; longer rounds drag and kill the energy.
Some hosts give bonus points for the funniest wrong answer. It's an unofficial rule but it makes the game way more entertaining.
Our adults and couples pages have plenty of crossover. For purely silly content, lean toward our kids page — kid logic is its own comedy genre.