Ramadan hasn’t even officially started and the theme songs are already doing what they’re supposed to do: setting the mood, hinting at chaos, and quietly warning us that no one is getting out of this season emotionally intact. From brother-shaped ghosts to love that bruises instead of heals, here’s what the promos are whispering (and what they’re not saying out loud).
Habib Akhouk – Mostafa Ghareeb & Diab
Heya Kemya?!
It begins with Sultan losing his father — and at the funeral, he meets a brother he’s never heard of before.
Hajjaj arrives like a mystery wrapped in confidence, drops cryptic hints about their father’s past, then disappears just as suddenly. That moment pushes Sultan to dig into his father’s hidden “treasure trove,” chasing answers that clearly come with consequences.
The song feels like temptation disguised as loyalty. You can see Hajjaj pulling Sultan into his world — trouble, secrets, adrenaline — and somewhere in the chaos, a bond forming that’s as dangerous as it is magnetic.
3ala Ad El Hob – Elissa
Ala Ad El Hob
Elissa and betrayal go hand in hand. Maryam has built a life that looks solid — until the past resurfaces and cracks it open. The song leans into that cruel equation: the deeper the love, the sharper the wound. It’s not loud heartbreak. It’s controlled devastation. And she’s standing at a crossroads.
Sawa Sawa – Bahaa Sultan
Sawa Sawa
A simple dream: love, marriage, a better life. Ahmed Malek’s character is fighting reality with pure determination, especially as illness and pressure creep in. “Sawa Sawa” feels steady — like someone choosing love over logic, over and over again. Not dramatic. Just stubborn in the most romantic way.
Ehna Wohosh – Eslam Shendy
El King
This one makes no apologies. “Ehna Wohosh” is pure dominance — a man rising in a world ruled by violence and power. But when your life is a battlefield, every win costs something. It’s bold, intense, and clearly building toward fire.
Awady Ala Allah – Maha Ftouni
El Set Monalisa
She thought she was walking into paradise. Instead, she walked into a transaction.
In Cairo, the illusion fades fast — a husband who serves himself first, a family waiting to claim her as part of the deal. “Awady Ala Allah” carries that quiet realization: the moment you understand the rules were never in your favor.
But it doesn’t sit in defeat. It feels like surrender to God — not to them. A woman rising from the wreckage of a marriage built on hidden conditions, facing society with something stronger this time.
If this is how Ramadan series are choosing to introduce themselves, we’re clearly not in for a quiet season. Brotherhoods that destabilize. Love that fractures. Dreams that fight poverty. Power that threatens to self-destruct.
Honestly? We’re seated.
We Said This: Don’t Miss…Ramadan Series Written and Directed by Female Creators

