Five-panel collage of campaign stills from Lay’s, Adidas, Heineken, Visa, and Guinness World Cup 2026 fan-ritual campaigns.

5 World Cup 2026 Campaigns: Fan Rituals

As the 2026 World Cup approaches, the strongest May campaigns are not just using football. They are claiming the rituals around it.

When brands stop borrowing the game

May’s strongest campaigns share one pattern. They do not treat the World Cup as borrowed attention. They treat it as a map of fan behavior.

Fan rituals are the repeated behaviors before, during, and after a match that show where a brand can credibly enter the experience.

The mechanism is simple: when a brand chooses one specific fan ritual, the campaign has a clearer job to do because it can improve a behavior people already understand.

For brand teams, that is not a creative nuance but an operating advantage, because ritual-led campaigns are easier to brief, localize, activate, measure, and extend across content, commerce, retail, CRM, and social channels.

The strongest May World Cup work is the work that chooses one fan ritual and makes the brand useful inside it.

The real question is whether the brand can make a fan moment easier, more social, more rewarding, or more repeatable without feeling pasted onto the tournament.

Campaigns claiming the moments around the match

Lay’s: The Epic Watch Party

Lay’s owns the watch-party snack ritual. The campaign brings Lionel Messi, David Beckham, Thierry Henry, Alexia Putellas, and Steve Carell into the same fan-facing idea, but the smarter move is not the celebrity stack. It is the behavior choice. Lay’s does not try to own football skill, national pride, or tournament drama. It owns the moment when people gather, open snacks, and turn a match into a shared viewing occasion.

Adidas: Backyard Legends

Adidas owns football mythology and backyard origin stories. Backyard Legends works because it understands that football culture is not only built in stadiums. It is built in small courts, neighborhood pitches, borrowed spaces, impossible matchups, and exaggerated memories. By pulling football icons, music, film, and younger talent into one mythic backyard story, Adidas turns the World Cup into a reminder that global football still depends on local imagination.

Heineken: Fan Volunteers

Heineken owns the workday viewing conflict. Fan Volunteers is strategically sharp because it starts with a real friction: many World Cup matches happen when people are meant to be working. Instead of pretending that tension does not exist, Heineken builds a tongue-in-cheek participation mechanic around Volunteer Time Off (VTO), local nonprofit activity, and matchday viewing. The brand does not simply say “watch football.” It creates a socially acceptable route into the behavior.

Visa: Tap In

Visa owns participation, rewards, and payment utility. Tap In translates a simple football action into a commercial mechanism: one tap can unlock access, prizes, promotions, and fan participation. That gives Visa a better role than generic sponsorship visibility. The brand is closest to the transaction layer, so the campaign works when it connects match moments to frictionless payment, cardholder rewards, local business support, and real-time participation.

Guinness: The World’s Cup and Singing Pints

Guinness owns the pub gathering ritual. The World’s Cup works because it does not chase the match itself. It claims the place where the match becomes social: the pub, the pint, the bartender, the table, and the strangers who feel like teammates by the final whistle. The smart part is continuity. Guinness connects the World Cup work to the 2023 Singing Pints St. Patrick’s Day ad, showing how a familiar pint-based creative idea can be reworked into a football reaction.

NESCAFÉ also tried to claim the post-match conversation with “The Third Half,” but the campaign works better as a strategic territory than as a standout creative execution.

Why this May pattern matters

The useful shift is from tournament association to behavior ownership. That matters because a World Cup brief can easily become a list of borrowed symbols: famous players, flags, chants, stadiums, trophies, and generic excitement. The stronger campaigns are more disciplined. They identify a fan moment, then build the brand role around that moment.

That is why the May set feels commercially useful. Lay’s has the snack and gathering moment. Adidas has the origin-story and football-culture moment. Heineken has the weekday tension. Visa has the tap, reward, and access layer. Guinness has the pub ritual. NESCAFÉ has a valid territory in the post-match conversation, even if the execution is not as strong as the strategic claim.

What brand teams should take from World Cup ritual work

The shared move across the five strongest campaigns is not “use football.” It is sharper than that. Each campaign picks a fan behavior the brand can credibly improve, then turns that behavior into a repeatable activation system across film, social, retail, promotions, payments, hospitality, or experience.

Takeaway: Do not brief a World Cup campaign around attention. Brief it around the fan moment your brand can credibly improve, then make that moment easier to activate, easier to repeat, and easier to measure.


A few fast answers before you act

What makes a good World Cup campaign?

A good World Cup campaign chooses a specific fan behavior and gives the brand a credible role inside it. Fame helps, but the campaign is stronger when the brand improves a real moment around the match.

Which brands stood out before the 2026 World Cup?

Lay’s, Adidas, Heineken, Visa, and Guinness stood out because each brand claimed a different football ritual. Lay’s claimed the watch party, Adidas claimed backyard football mythology, Heineken claimed workday viewing tension, Visa claimed participation and payment utility, and Guinness claimed the pub gathering.

Why are brands focusing on fan rituals?

Brands are focusing on fan rituals because rituals create repeatable behavior. A campaign built around a repeatable behavior is easier to activate across channels than a campaign built only around tournament excitement.

What can marketers learn from these campaigns?

Marketers should start with the fan moment, not the sponsorship asset. The best campaign role is the one the brand can credibly support through product, service, channel, data, retail, or experience.

Which campaign is the most strategically useful?

Visa is the most structurally useful because Tap In connects the match moment to payment, rewards, access, and participation. Lay’s is the cleanest behavior fit because snacks already belong naturally inside the watch-party ritual.

Published by

Sunil Bahl

Sunil Bahl

SunMatrix Ramble is an independent publication on AI, MarTech, advertising, and consumer experience, published since 2009. Sunil Bahl is a global transformation leader in consumer experience platforms and MarTech, with 27+ years of experience translating digital change into scalable platforms, operating models, and commercially useful outcomes.

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