The Wedding Singer Drinking Game Rules

Turn The Wedding Singer into a lively movie night with a simple drinking game. You get big laughs, big feelings, and wall to wall 80s music. Adam Sandler plays Robbie Hart, a wedding singer who can work any crowd. Drew Barrymore plays Julia, a kind waitress caught with the wrong fiancé. Their slow burn chemistry keeps the story moving between gigs, breakups, and messy plans.
This drinking game matches the movie’s best beats, from awkward receptions to full on sing along moments. Keep your drink nearby when the songs kick in and the hair gets higher. Pick your favorite drink, start the film, and pace yourself. The runtime is a tight 97 minutes, so the rules can sneak up on you.
The Wedding Singer Drinking Game Rules:
- Take a sip any time Robbie sings, even for a few lines
- Take a sip when a clear 1980s hit starts playing on the soundtrack
- Drink when you see big 80s hair, loud prints, or extreme shoulder pads
- Take a sip when a wedding guest makes a weird or rude request for a song
- Drink when Robbie gives wedding advice or acts like the wedding “pro”
- Drink when Linda is on screen and acts cold or selfish
- Drink when Robbie looks crushed, spirals, or talks about being left at the altar
- Drink when Sammy (Robbie’s best friend) gives blunt or awkward advice
- Take a sip when Julia serves food, carries plates, or works an event
- Drink when Glenn shows off, brags, or tries to look perfect
- Finish your drink when Robbie performs “Love Stinks” at the wedding
- Finish your drink when Robbie sings “Somebody Kill Me”
- Drink when someone calls out Glenn’s last name (Gulia) or the joke lands
- Drink when Robbie and Julia have a quiet, real moment that shows they fit
- Finish your drink when Billy Idol appears
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About the Movie
- Title
- The Wedding Singer
- Released
- 13 Feb 1998
- Rated
- PG-13
- Runtime
- 97 min
- Genre
- Comedy
- Plot
- Robbie Hart is singing the hits of the 1980s at weddings and other celebrations. He also can keep the party going in good spirit, he knows what to say and when to say it. Julia is a waitress at the events where Robbie performs. When both of them find someone to marry and prepare for their weddings, it becomes clear that they've chosen wrong partners.
- Language
- English, Hebrew
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