What the Sunnah Teaches Us About Having Fun in Marriage
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There is a quiet assumption many Muslims carry into marriage. That being serious about your Deen means being serious all the time. That a practicing Muslim couple should be focused on ibadah, on responsibility, on building a home. Not on racing each other down a road or laughing until it hurts.

The Sunnah says otherwise.
The Prophet ﷺ Raced His Wife
Aisha RA narrated that she accompanied the Prophet ﷺ on a journey. He asked the companions to move ahead, then challenged her to a race. She won. Years later, on another journey, he challenged her again. This time he won, and said to her: "This is for that," referring to her earlier victory. [Sunan Abi Dawud 2578, graded Sahih by Al-Albani]
Read that again. The Messenger of Allah ﷺ, leading an entire ummah, took the time to race his wife. Twice. And kept score.
Playfulness in marriage is not a distraction from the Deen. For the Prophet ﷺ it was part of it.
Why This Gets Forgotten
Life does not announce when it starts crowding out the fun in your marriage. It just happens gradually. Work gets heavier. Children arrive. The list of things that need doing never ends. Marriage quietly shifts from two people genuinely enjoying each other to two people managing a household together.

This is not a failure. It is what happens when two people are doing life. The question is what you do about it.
Many couples accept the shift as inevitable. They settle into a comfortable routine that works practically but lacks the warmth and laughter that brought them together. The Prophet ﷺ modelled a different way. He joked with his family. He gave his wife a nickname. He made time for her even while carrying the weight of prophethood.
If he found the time, the rest of us have no excuse.
Playfulness Is a Form of Rahmah
Marriage in Islam is described as a source of Sakinah, Mawaddah, and Rahmah. Peace, love, and mercy. These are not passive gifts that arrive on the day of the nikkah. They require effort. They require moments where you are not managing the household together but actually enjoying each other.

When you introduce fun into your marriage, you are practicing Rahmah. A shared laugh, a playful challenge, a competitive game played after the kids are asleep. These moments build the emotional reserve that a marriage draws on during harder times. They remind you that your spouse is also your companion, not just your co-manager.
Your Spouse's Emotional Needs Are Not a Distraction
Allah created hearts with different thresholds. Understanding what your spouse needs to feel connected is central to loving them well. For many couples that need is simply quality time and undivided attention. Not a grand gesture. Just presence.
When you dedicate even 30 minutes to sitting down, playing together, and laughing, you are saying: you matter more than the to-do list. That message lands.
A Halal Way to Bring the Sunnah Into Your Home
This is exactly why we built Muslim Couple Games. Not because Muslim couples need another product, but because they deserve a halal, genuinely fun way to carve out time for each other.

Barakah and Banter is competitive, high-energy, and built around 180 cards that will have you performing, competing, and revealing things you did not know about each other. Customers call it the best couple game they own. Not best Muslim couple game. Best couple game, full stop.
Wudu Rather? takes a different angle. Built around the five love languages with 150 cards of playful choices and gender-specific challenges, it works particularly well for newer couples or anyone wanting a more intimate evening.
Both are Shariah-approved by a qualified Ustadh. Both are built for married Muslim couples. Both are in the bundle from £39.99, with the Reconnection Pack included complimentary on orders over £35.
Play Together
You getting married to your spouse was not a coincidence. Maintaining that bond is an ongoing act of ibadah. The Prophet ﷺ set the example. All that is left is to follow it.